What is at the heart of "style"; how is it defined in the context of photographic creativity?
John Sexton, who's mentor and was AA, and who photographs the natural scene, is he as well supposed to stand up and start being his own photographer? He and others produce photographs that are similar in style to something someone has done before? It's not wrong to seek to be as good as someone whom you admire? Like someone said earlier, they're not trying to find the tripod holes of someone who went before them and niether am I.
IMO, the bar was set long ago with the early masters as to what defines fine art black and white photography. I'm not referring to mere subject matter but rather that visual sense of beauty, tonality, and sharpness that is possible in a photograph that I may make. I choose to reach for that bar in the "style" of Adams, the Westons, Sexton, etc... I like how they "see" the natural scene. Does that admission make me a copy cat, someone who lacks my own personal sense of creativity? I don't believe that nonsense for a second.
Chuck
John Sexton, who's mentor and was AA, and who photographs the natural scene, is he as well supposed to stand up and start being his own photographer? He and others produce photographs that are similar in style to something someone has done before? It's not wrong to seek to be as good as someone whom you admire? Like someone said earlier, they're not trying to find the tripod holes of someone who went before them and niether am I.
IMO, the bar was set long ago with the early masters as to what defines fine art black and white photography. I'm not referring to mere subject matter but rather that visual sense of beauty, tonality, and sharpness that is possible in a photograph that I may make. I choose to reach for that bar in the "style" of Adams, the Westons, Sexton, etc... I like how they "see" the natural scene. Does that admission make me a copy cat, someone who lacks my own personal sense of creativity? I don't believe that nonsense for a second.

Chuck