Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/10/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search][CONTINUED....] Here's where I'd like to introduce the idea of consistent dissonance. It's basically this: things can be as disparate as you want, as long as everything has more or less the same degree of separation from everything else. Let me make the case using a simple, mechanical example. Let's say you're going to crop your prints. And, in every single case, you crop to a different rectangle. That works, because the proportion of the pictures are _all_ different. But then let's say that out of 17 pictures, you present 16 that have the same 35mm aspect ratio of 2 to 3, and one that's square. Well, the square picture sticks out, doesn't it? It doesn't fit the group. In the group where everything is different, the square would fit right in. In the latter case, you establish a base, an expectation, and then go against it: inconsistent dissonance. It's the same way with very different pictures in a portfolio. If you decide that your work is all over the map, you can actually work with that--as long as you keep the dissonance between all the pictures more or less equivalent. I've seen strong portfolios built up from pictures that are all different genres, even that are all different techniques--and that can actually work. But if your portfolio has one gum print, one platinum print, one lith print, and so forth on through all the alternative processes, you can't get away with including three similar cyanotypes of flowers. You can get away with using _one_ of them, because that's consistent with the differences you're establishing. But not three. The academic portfolio idea--the conceit of the "body of work" (which almost never is, but that's another story)--is that there can _be_ no dissonance at all from picture to picture--all the pictures have to be uniformly consistent with each other. That's nonsense. It just has to be proportional, consistent, aptly judged--well modulated. Well then...I haven't even talked about methods of presentation and the psychological pitfalls of getting the final work done (there are some, as people who have actually gotten that far will probably agree). Looks like the disquisition will have to go to a Part 3. More to follow in a few days. - --Mike