THIS is the kind of attitude that IMHO will destroy photography. The opinion of ignorant people who think that only the final result is what counts, so they would be ready to switch to digital as soon as it gives the result they are expecting. Why don't painters say similar things about digital imaging and the possibility to create images with the help of programs like Adobe Illustrator ? Because they are too smart and they DONT WANT to degrade the value of their work by accepting that it could be done in an easier, faster way by a less skilled person... not like photoraphers, sadly...
IT'S THE PROCESS THAT COUNTS, NOT (ONLY) THE FINAL RESULT... THIS IS ABOUT ARTISTIC EXPRESSION, NOT COMMERCIAL WORK...
I think you all should read the article "Is Photography Dead?" in the December 10, 2007 edition of NEWSWEEK. You can go to a local Barnes & Noble or Borders, etc book store and stand there and read it for free if you don't like/don't want to buy the magazine. The article is on page 94.
Jed
Painters who are doing well on gallery sales of original works and books aren't going digital, but "Tru Giclée" is all the rage if you look a bit downmarket. If one is the sort of painter who sells originals for under $5000 and infrequently at that (i.e., without enough of a reputation to sell work steadily for $15K or more), then inkjet prints for under $100, mousepads, refrigerator magnets, coffee mugs, and such are another income stream.
Well, sorry you didn't like the article.
Not like it's anything we didn't already know, but I thought it was interesting to see the argument published in "main-stream" print media. It's one thing when a forum that is dedicated to the topic, such as this site has discussions about it...
...quite another when a few million people in the U.S. and elsewhere read it in print, even if the magazine might be mostly liberal media.
Exposure...I guarantee that article, for better or worse, got a couple hundred thousand times more exposure than either you or I discussing something on a photography forum. That's something we analog fellows ought to think about these days. Maybe you could write the next article for them? That would be awesome!
Sincerely,
Jed
Hey folks,
I wish I had time to post more but I just don't between editing View Camera, moderating the LF Forum and running a photography business.
I guess what I am seeing here is that Sean is asking what we think on a very valid topic... what should our role be as traditional photographers in an increasingly digital world? Do we stick our head in the sand, move into some walled-off compound in the middle of nowhere, or do we stand proud with our cameras-without-preview-windows and cheerfully explain the wonders of film to those who ask......
So how about it... how would you answer the question Sean originally posted??
Well....my role will be to pursue traditional photography far less defensively and without hostility to any who would challenge the fact that I'm doing it. And that applies to both the real world and the on-line world. I wrote earlier that the initial 'gee-wiz' era of digital has pretty much ended. It's a bit easier now to be a friendly, informative and non-combative ambassador of tradition. Perhaps it has taken a while to become comfortable in our own skins again, but now that it has for me, I look forward to presenting what I love to those who will listen and take the time to look more closely.
I can't see myself ever believing that 'the end result is all that matters' because the traditional process is a major part of the experience and enjoyment for me.
I have to tell you that after 11 pages of responses, if I were a totally DigiGirl (as one poster put it), there are a few of you here that would scare the hell out of me & keep me from ever asking you about your film camera!Frankly... I think I'd go to great lengths to avoid a few of you all together!
There are others here who I would happily approach with my questions. Because they give the impression that they would be happy as clams to answer them & maybe just maybe lure me into film!
Well....my role will be to pursue traditional photography far less defensively and without hostility to any who would challenge the fact that I'm doing it.
But, you know, it still just erks me when I hear a digital advocate say those ever abrasive words.........."the end result is all that matters".
That sort of dismissive "the end result is all that matters" discounts the fact that the end result of a different process is a different result. In some ways, I also think that the end result is more important than the process, but that the two are inseparable. You can't get something that looks like a contact print from a camera negative from anything but a contact print from a camera negative. You might get something nice or that appeals to you just as much or more, but it's a different thing.
or do I take that energy and use it to pump up traditional photography -which might actually make a difference?.. If someone wants to argue for a militant stance then let's hear it, why and how does it improve things for traditional photography?
I think Sean's point is that the "fight" is a ridiculous waste of time and energy, which could be channeled into something more productive.
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