Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/11/20
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>>>I am no revisionist, and I am certainly no deconstructionist<<< Marc, Thanks for the long message. Still, I'm amazed that you'd cite ADS as the source of your contentions. Aren't you the same guy who was insisting last week that the Leica reps who said they monitored the LUG don't necessarily do so, as their business is telling you what you want to hear? As I deal with advertisers and their concerns all the time, day in and day out, let me just assure you that not all advertisements are infallible sources of objective information. <g> Ads don't get more veracious as they recede backwards in time. And as far as understanding Adams is concerned, what we're discussing does raise one interesting possibilitiy to my mind. Namely, that perhaps some disagreement or altercation with Leica during the period of his endorsement LED to his later statements that he had "always preferred Contaxes," which also seem to be an indisputable feature of the historical record. He did seem careful to make his "endorsement" of Leica's competitor retroactive! IOW, it's not inconceivable to me that his willingness to endorse Contax later in life may have been retribution for a slight or an offense suffered when he was endorsing (presumably, for pay) the Leica. Knowing the pressures to which advertisers subject their paid henchmen, and also knowing Adams's independence and principles, such a "parting of the ways" is not very difficult to postulate. In any event, the one thing that is indisputable is that Adams is not known for his 35mm work, despite the publication of a platry few examples. Mark Rabiner is exactly right when he says that Adams is indelibly associated with view cameras and sheet film, and that most people are shocked to learn how often he used rollfilm. I can attest to this latter fact firsthand. Again, I wonder if someone could please supply the date of the R4's introduction. Adams died in 1984, I believe. I think it is only possible for him to have owned one for a short few years at the very end of his life, long after his most productive years had ended and during a time when he was involved mainly in darkroom work, consolidating his _ouvre_, printing for backorders amassed by the late Harry Lunn, and printing the vast "Museum Set" project. His ownership of an R4 at that time is a trivial fact that bears little if at all on the preponderance of the evidence. One might as well claim that Edward Weston was a "devoted color photographer" because he shot a few sheets of 8x10 Kodachrome in the '40s. - --Mike