I don't doubt his skills, rather I doubt that he is considering anyone but those with large enough checkbooks to register in certain markets. This is related to a comment I heard from a curator at a recent show opening. The photographer in question was presenting a number of form/line/shape/etc type photographs of plants, rocks, and landscapes, and the curator commented that he was very moved by this new way of seeing and that this photographer was doing something that no one else was doing. ???
While most modern photographers are working in styles other than this, there certainly are some doing just this same thing, and certainly many who have done so in the past. And, if you look at people who are not heavily marketed (myself for example), there are a great number more who are doing this as well, they just don't register on the highbrow radar because they are working on their own without a lot of high-dollar support. Their work may be just as strong, or stronger in some instances, as many better known photographers, yet they don't get counted in the tally because of their relative obscurity.
I'm just saying that the same thing may apply here - I would be surprised if there were only 10 people doing technically solid work in color carbon in the entire world. Sure, perhaps there may be only 10 people that have good enough representation to be noticed by someone only looking at those with high profile representation, but surely there are more than that who do work in their own little workshop darkrooms and who possess the technical ability required for this, who but lack in representation and therefore don't get the nod as it were.
- Randy