Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/11/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Date: Mon, 30 Nov 1998 13:03:36 -0800 From: Donal Philby <donalphilby@earthlink.net> Subject: Re: [Leica] Best photography books I recommend "Light on the Land" by Art Wolf. All 35mm. He shows what is possible with landscape when light and content dominate. Much of book shot with 200-400 zoom--an unlikely landscape lens. His latest book on the Pac Northwest is a stunner too, but more of a pretty picture travel book. Light on the Land is a book of art, that will show you just how much more there is to see. I used to be a big Art Wolfe fan, until I read a piece by Kenneth Brower in the _Atlantic Monthly_, which described some of the digital image manipulation techniques that he'd used to produce his book _Migrations_. These were not interpretive changes as might be done in conventional darkroom work, but significant alterations made in the content and form of the images - 'cloning' of zebras and the like. Wolfe was unrepentant, saying that he's bound by artistic standards and not journalistic ones. I say that an artist's job is the same as a journalist's: to tell the truth as best he or she can. I can no longer look at Wolfe's work without wondering, and for me that means that I can no longer look at his work with wonder. - -Alexey .......................................................................... Alexey Merz | URL: http://www.webcom.com/alexey | email: alexey@webcom.com | PGP public key: http://pgp5.ai.mit.edu/ | voice:503/494-6840 | Transported to a surreal landscape, a young girl kills the | first woman she meets and then teams up with three complete | strangers to kill again. | -- TV listing for _The Wizard of Oz_, | in the Marin County, Ca., newspaper