Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/09/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>>Many great musicians and composers are well documented as being >>liberated by the use of such mind-altering psycodelics. Are >>there any famous photographers who did the same?? >Were they liberated, or is it like drinking to stay warm in the >snow (it's >an illusion, body temperature actually goes down)? >Or like using Leicas >and thinking it will automatically make >your pictures look better. :-) The only source of creative liberation is ideas. Ideas and insights can be generated by any experience, and the nature of that experience can not validate or invalidate the ideas that flow from it. If the sense of the interconnectedness of all life that can spring from a psychedelic experience prompts someone to devote their life to improving the human condition, or prompts them to pay more attention to the aesthetics of their endeavors, does the fact that their new outlook was prompted by a drug experience mean that these changes are illusory? I think not. On a Leica note - when I finally got back to using Leicas, my pictures did get better. Not because a Leica is somehow an intrinsically "better" camera, but because I was conscious of the history of the camera and the great photographers who used it. This awareness caused me to try harder, because I felt some sense of responsibility to that history. I did not want to use a camera capable of such greatness for mundane and banal snapshots. It was the *idea* of Leica rather than the camera itself that prompted this change. So no, the psychedelic experience is not like "drinking to stay warm in the snow". And I suspect there are many photographers (both great and obscure) whose photography has, in some way, been influenced by such drugs. Unless, of course, they didn't inhale... Paul Chefurka