The Salgado show at GEH of Migrations contained over 200 prints.. 1/2 of them were 24 x36 from 35mm the other half were 22 x16 from 35mm. This was a pivotal moment for me to attend this show as I was about to find out if I deserved to call myself a printer.
I had been at it for awhile but for about 4 years before this Salgado show I had decided to concentrate fine art gallery printing( I had been commercially printing for 15 years before that ) and now I wanted to get to a higher level much like the Salgado printer was obviously at.
A few things became extremely apparent to me:
1, being that Salgado had two printers one doing the larger prints and the other doing the smaller prints... Both printers were magnificent and I personally thought the larger prints were better.
Beautiful prints at 26 x magnification and I witnessed people standing in front of these prints and weeping, yes weeping , the show was very moving.
At that moment I realized the print sniffers could go to hell, they were lost in technical mumbo jumbo, tech sheet , graphical nonsense... the key was the ability to make images on the wall that people could view and appreciate and bring emotion to the viewer.
2, I also concluded that I was technically a good printer and there was room for me to continue printing for others... Since that date I have never tried to make the perfect print as I do not believe there is such a thing , but have tried to make prints that others appreciate when hung on the wall.
I did not flinch when my client came in with the Xpan image and said 6 ft.. I knew it could be done, the devil was in the details. I think most people here are fighting with the details , and should step back from this technical obsession and start making prints that create an emotion..
toy camera,8 x10 Sinar, pinhole, camera phone, hassalblad, leica, canon, nikon, fuji, dianna, wet plate, 20 x 24 camera... these are all the simple tools, what is important is the light on the subject and conveying that light.