ChristopherCoy
Subscriber
I'm at the point in the Mexico volume where he sends his prints off to Guadalajara with friends of his, and sells 6 prints. After they return, he makes reprints of those he sold. It's never occurred to me that images have a "life". I can think of at least 5 images off the top of my head that I am extremely proud of, but yet they sit on a hard drive. Only one or two of those have been printed only once. I'm sure most people will read that statement and think "what? why?". But aside from revisiting the images infrequently on a screen, after I've photographed it, retouched it, and showed it to a few people or posted it to a forum or three, I forget about them and move on to the next image.
I think this portion of his book made me realize that "photography" isn't just about the current image, and I need to go back and get all those images that I'm proud of printed, and make them tangible. I realized that a photographic body of work isn't just one image, it's a whole "thing". I think about it as if Michelangelo sculpted David in pieces. One arm here, one leg there, and then put all the pieces in the box. It isn't until he attaches all the pieces to one another that the statue is made.
I think this portion of his book made me realize that "photography" isn't just about the current image, and I need to go back and get all those images that I'm proud of printed, and make them tangible. I realized that a photographic body of work isn't just one image, it's a whole "thing". I think about it as if Michelangelo sculpted David in pieces. One arm here, one leg there, and then put all the pieces in the box. It isn't until he attaches all the pieces to one another that the statue is made.