Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/12/09
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Recently I needed a few pictures to illustrate that elusive and at the same time most important characteristic of a picture: the Leica fingerprint. Searching through thousands of my negatives and prints, I came to the conclusion that my pictures are lousy, contentwise at least. But also technically there is a large improvement possible. But the core question is of course: can they be identified as Leica pictures? The underlying assumption is that there is or should be a difference between a picture taken with a Leica and a Leica picture. The two most obvious characteristics of classical Leica photography are: the stream-of-consciousness-type of photography and the quality of the lens. SoC-photography is the snapshot type of picture taking where the photographer is immersed in the action or the environment and takes pictures almost as a direct interaction with the enfolding course of events. As a contrast: the artificial and deliberately constructed reality of the studio scene or a landscape photo. There is a fine dividing line here, at least it seems: environmental portraits of the Gisela Freund or HCB type are true Leicalike, but Avedon or Penn portraits are not? After some considesation, it becomes obvious (to me at least) that this distinction is untenable. A portrait with a Leica R and a apo100 in a studio on tripod or with an M6 and a apo 90 or apo 135 has to qualify as a Leica picture. The type of pictures and the content is not sufficient to be the distinguishing characteristic between a Leica and a non-Leica picture. Is then the lens the only way to differentiate the L and N-L pictures? Again a dangerous assumption. Many pictures made with Leicas are of mediocre technical quality (when compared to the optical potential) and the introduction of the characteristic of bokeh does not save the day. The illustrations in the fine Konica broschure are typically (and I assume deliberately) Leicalike in style, content and quality. I think that it is the sum of these three elements (style, content and optical quality) and most specifically the constructive integration of these elements that defines the true Leica picture. As a photographic tool, the Leica has instrumental qualities and restrictions that inspire and "force" (or suggest and guide) a certain style of taking pictures. Style here is not to be taken as meaning handheld versus tripod or flash versus available light, but an approach to the subject matter that suits the instrumental characteristics of the camera. Content in my view is free: anything can be the topic of a Leica picture, macro as well as landscape, glamour as well as social documentary. It is not the content itself that is the defining element, but the way it is approached and depicted by the imaging chain. The optical quality is the third element and here we encounter serious problems. Im my ongoing research on the Gigabit film and other high resolution films (like TechPan) I have discovered that it is quite a challenge to use the true potential of Leica lenses in most non-lab or testing situations. The imaging chain involves all aspects from exposure to focusing to choice of film and the match of film characteristics to the lens and the printing paper etc. There is as example a big difference in reproduction characteristics between a low light low contrast situation and the optical quality of certain Leica lenses and other Leica lenses and high contrast bright light situations. Here then is my personal challenge for the next year: try to develop an approach (style) to any subject of interest that maximises the instrumental characteristics of the Leica camera and to elaborate (study, explore) several types of imaging chain that suits the optical quality of current Leica lenses in specific image taking situations. The goal of all this: to explore the unknown world of Leica in its essence. Some additional questionsto help focus on the issue: does a picture made with a Hexar RF count as a Leica picture. And a picture taken with a Hexar and a Leica lens on it, or taken with a Leica M and a Konica lens or a Voigtlander lens attached to the M? Are these questions just semantic juggling or is there some value added to a picture when taken with a Leica camera and lens, both R and M. This search is my personal one and I am not sure I will succeed or report on it. Erwin