faberryman
Member
It doesn't really matter if it was last week, 2 years ago or 100 years ago, if somebody is going to retail your work they need to know what you were thinking and why you made the photographs so they can express these things to the potential buyer. you'd have to be able to say more than "I like puppies" even if they were all photographs of puppies.
I was in New York around Christmas 1979, and, in addition to visiting museums and galleries, I went to this, for lack of a better word, store that sold original photographs, photographic books, museum and gallery posters of photographic exhibits, and the like. They had an original Moonrise Hernandez which as I recall was around $1800. Well, I liked it a lot and was thinking about buying it, but since it represented 9-12 months rent, and I really didn't have the money, I reluctantly left with an Ansel Adams exhibit poster with his photograph of a hard boiled egg slicer, and a Dorothea Lange exhibit poster of Migrant Mother as consolation prizes. I knew the story behind Migrant Mother so I really didn't need anyone to explain that to me. There were a couple of Ansel Adams posters to chose from, but I liked his photograph of a hard boiled egg slicer best. I still have no idea why he took a photograph of it or what it means. It looks pretty much like a hard boiled egg slicer to me. The poster is in my darkroom, and it serves as a continual source of inspiration. So if anyone knows what it means, for God's sake don't tell me and ruin it.
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