Anty this, anty that (slightly OTT)
"I think anti-digital threads are good, but we probably don't need them on APUG. Better to post the anti-digital threads on photo.net, dpreview.com, luminouslandscape.com, and such, where they might do some good."
- David Goldfarb
I found the above post on the first page after trawling through this lengthy thread tonight. Seems a shame to me that David's advice seems to have gone by the wayside.
I hit 20 this year, and have no option but to try and look forward to learning digital capture in most of my photography modules. I hear the arguments that some Apugers put forward for digitising negatives and prints, but like a lot of younger generation photographers and people I'm not convinced. Nor am I good enough to start waving my name badge saying I'm a darkroom printer either.
It'd sad to hear Les convince himself that digital is the way forward as he cites financial; corporate and every other reason for going digital instead of film. Popular British photographers like Charlie Waite and Fay Godwin, my ex-favourites. also have gone down that path. One notable exception whose work another photographer introduced me to is the ex-war photographer Don McCullum: something about his experience in the war which makes me think he is too connected with the fluidity of silver halide imaging to go shooting pixels. But what do I know (as people keep telling me).
At a summer exhibition that Charlie Waite did in London, my mates and I (all photographers) trotted to see it. We all felt he'd cranked the saturation levels and RGB curves way up on his Velvia. As usual, his compositions were symmetrical; balanced and precise along with the focus. But the prints - totally gaudy and soulless (there's that word - now shoot me). We left with that awful feeling, knowing that Dr Seuss really was dead. Pops lied, because he thought it would be better for us. Mom didn't help either; she made us all of that modern fusion cooking instead of a traditional bowl of pasta to fill all those hollow tummy rumbles we all felt after the exhibition.
Fay Godwin who I used to adore as my favourite photographer when I was 16 has also 'gone' digital (which isn't always the same as losing one's marbles). I know what I like about Fay Godwin, and none of it is particularly apparent in her new direction. Same goes for Charlie Waite, whose overdigitised work screams digital, even though he uses film. Just because you're older, it doesn't mean you're wiser. Digital is the way forward for a lot of older mature people and silver halide is the way forward for working kids too. That's fine with me: I couldn't have afforded my 5"x4" otherwise.
Inicidentally, I was out with my Yashica 124G shooting in the town, and a young kid asked me what on earth I was using. I let him look through the viewfinder and his face beamed up with delight. He said that was really great and smiled. Then he turned to point to his grandfather and said: "but grand-dad uses one of those" - a digital camera. The old man was too busy staring at his LCD to notice his grandson was talking to a stranger. I just thought that was really sad. I'd rather show a kid how to see through a camera than have an expert let his social skills atrophy because of a digital one.
Have a good night.