Bob Carnie
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I recently saw a print of Brett's Holland Canal -- the richness of that print sets a very high standard, indeed.
http://www.photographywestgraphics.com/posters/pages/hc.php
I had to do a bit of a google search to find a representaive image -- really shows this limit of screen-based images!
Also Fraenkel Gallery.
Brett Weston IMO is one of the best printers of all time...
He is the image maker/printer I use as an example of someone who truly used total black as part of the image. One does not have to see into every shadow in a print, and those areas can be large -- if you do it anywhere as well as Brett.
Another Weston and master of B&W printing is Kim Weston. He printed quite a lot of his uncle and grandfathers work, possibly even the ones you have seen. ...
Visiting museums and galleries has had a significant impact on my own work. Two particular shows come to mind. 1. The French Monument Survey, work I saw on display in Paris. The print quality amazed me--even though the prints were from the 1850s. 2. Photographers of Genius which I saw at the Getty in LA. This show was particularly helpful to me in that it had photos from the the 1840s to modern prints. ...
Would be interesting to see work of good photographers who are soso printers. Anyone know?
I'm convinced that lot of the print quality in older prints has to do with their large format and less so with extraordinary printing abilities.
So what's your point? Is print making limited to enlargements only?
... I feel my generation is spending quite a bit of time in the post-processing/printing world via the digital, which I always find intriguing. The sheer amount of time spent on PS with 10,000 raw images from two minutes on the South Rim.
...Anyway, we (analog printers) also need to realize that image-taking and image-printing need together in harmony. Neither alone can achieve perfection in my opinion.
I've enjoyed reading this thread because it is an issue I've struggled with. It's hard to improve when you only have yourself to model after. Fortunately, I have a friend who is a former professional photographer and is more than willing to critique my work and discuss any and all aspects of traditional photography.
... Workshops also help fill the void ...
The galleries are full of them. Let's remember that many good photographers never printed themselves. They were too busy making great photographs and considered printing a necessary evil and not part of the creative process. I enjoy doing both, and I'm also convinced that half the art is in the printing. Printing is not craft alone. Unfortunately, I'm pretty alone with this view.
No, I also agree. Photography is a complete package from previsualization to the mounting of the print. I don't know how a photographer can let someone else print his negatives. Only the photographer himself knows what he wants to say.
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