Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/04/09
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]= As one who said, in response to Christian Becker's criticism of Eric= = Welch's pictures, "it is hard to imagine what benefit any photograph= er = could derive from just being told that 'most of your pictures [are] = unimpressive,'" I would now like to comment on Christian's more rece= nt = explanations vis-=E0-vis that criticism. He says, "What distinguish= es = the impressive from the unimpressive is whether there is compassion = for the subject," and that "you have to have empathy to be a good = photographer" and be "able to transmit feelings to the viewer," and = he = adds, "If HCB's pictures are impressive THAT is what makes them, not= = technical quality, which is the least important thing." = Certainly compassion may be one element in making a picture (or any = artwork) impressive. Writers like Shakespeare and Faulkner have sho= wn = great compassion for their subjects, as did Mozart in his operas and= = other works, and more recently Robert Altman, in his film "Nashville= ," = showed great compassion for an enormously wide range of characters = (even though they sometimes behaved despicably); and many of Henri = Cartier-Bresson's pictures have this quality too. But one should no= t = fail to recognize that other qualities may contribute to making a wo= rk = of art impressive. For example, Ansel Adams's photographs, which I,= = like most people, find impressive, frequently depict inanimate objec= ts = that neither call for nor elicit anyone's compassion. Yet, on the = other hand, the grandeur, nobility, and magnificence they convey is = the product of Adams's masterful manipulation of two other important= = elements in any successful work of art: form and technique. So it i= s = not true that technical quality is "the least important thing" (whic= h = is presumably a mere overstatement for emphasis on Christian's part)= =2E = Without technical quality an artwork effectively does not exist, and= = so how could it be less important than anything. The point is rathe= r = that technical quality is not the only thing. In HCB's photographs,= I = think, it is the combination of compassion as conveyed through their= = form and technical quality that makes them successful works of art. = And finally, regarding Christian's remarks on "How could one define = picture quality? My simple answer is - by comparis[on]. If you = compare a lot you finally find out;" I think that is a very importan= t = point, and I emphatically agree. As B. H. Haggin observed, "The goo= d = in art becomes the criteria by which we judge the bad." There are n= o = absolutes here, only relativities. = Art Peterson