Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/12/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]About Art Wolfe's book. It's amazing to me that people can look at everything from their 5 year old's drawing of grandmothers house, to portraits by Picasso, to landscapes by Karen Francis Rugala, or birds by Robert Bateman, and call it art. What are Ansel Adams prints classed as? Art? Photography? I personally call it art. I knew Ansel Adams and I have seen some "straight prints" of his negatives. Not a pretty sight. All of Ansel Adams "creations" were "created" in the darkroom. He sometimes spent weeks (many) making the FIRST PRINT. After that, it was easier. But the manipulation that went on was not for the faint of heart. Ansel Adams was himself, the pre-Alpha release of Photoshop. Intensifying and reducing parts of negatives, masking, burning, dodging, potassium ferricynade selective bleaching in the fixer (not rapid fix), etc, etc, etc... He was both the composer and the conductor of the concert. Mother nature provided the individual voices. My point is, someone can completely manufacture an image in the darkroom and it's OK. But run it through Photoshop, and it's a crime. I know Art Wolfe. I have talked to him about digital manipulation. And I agree with him. If you are producing art, how you produce it is up to you. It's art. And art is in the eye of the beholder. If you are producing reportage or documentary photographs, *altering* the photographic content is forbidden. Enhancing the colors, creating better separation, and the like, is OK. But be careful. If you stop and think, the different palates of Kodachrome, Velvia, Agfa, etc, slide films, combined with universally accepted polarizing, warming, enhancing, split ND or color grads, will produce completely and totally different images of the exact same subject. Even gross under or over exposure. But that's OK. Doing the exact same thing in Photoshop isn't. ??? Baloney. If it is sold or displayed as art, do whatever you want or need, to make it work. It's art. If it represents reality, keep it reasonably real. Art's book on Migrations, is an artistic statement, not a factual statement. And Art is the first to tell you just that. I like Art Wolfe and I like his work. He is one of the most dedicated nature photographers we have today. And he is a "real" person. Nothing fake here! And he will never manipulate an image, without telling you that it is manipulated. And how it is manipulated. And why, if you want to know. Jim