Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/04/09
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Paul Schliesser <paulsc@eos.net> wrote good stuff concerning the education on some photographers, ending with: >If you are passionate about photography, why wouldn't you want to = >learn about it, and if you did, how would that be bad? And who is = >there who would not benefit from knowing more about their chosen = >field, no matter how good they are? I don't think photography is essentially different in this respect from other arts or even sciences. People who do original work whether it is great pieces of art or pathbreaking theories will have to be aware where we are now, what has been done, what techniques are available and what problems/opportunities have opened in our time. But equally important is to keep one's own view of this world separate from the external impulses. If that is lost no orginal contribution can follow. One just slides into consuming other's ideas and perhaps replicating them. I think this is the most difficult thing - how to be part of this world, say someting about it with photographs or else, but not be overwhelmed by fancy concepts or equipment, people with sharp but narrow techniques etc. Too philosphical for LUGers I suppose but I do think it actually has Leica content. I've always believed in kind of Occam's razor in photography - have the simplest equipment with which you can take the images you want to take. Anything more complex separates you from the subject and brings artifical elements between your intuition and the world seen by the plain eye. Reading too many pages of instrucion manuals is just as bad as reading too many art books. But without any you are lost. Call me a minimalist ;-). Regards, Kari Eloranta