Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/04/29
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>ted grant wrote: > >> And as far as buying prints of those I like, I prefer to collect books for my >> personal library, as without books to learn photography, it is like trying to >> sail the oceans without charts. It is a much greater value for the dollars >>than >> a single print hanging on the wall. > >I, too, am a collector of books, not prints. One of the beauties of >photography is that it is accessible to almost anyone. Painting and >sculpture and other "art" is unique and only for a few. > >Photography is the communication for the masses (listening, Oddmund??), >a way to move people across languages and cultures. And I'd rather have >my dogeared copy of the "Family of Man" or the "Creation" by Ernst Haas >that I can haul down to the local coffee house and get lost in than any >number of "original" prints hanging in my home. > >Even with my advertising work, it is nice to touch many people. I shot >the composite photo on the cover of TurboTax/MacinTax software package >that had a print run of 7 million, plus all the catalogues and ads. It >feels good to have my work seen by many, many people. To me, prints and >transparencies are just the raw materials that take you to the printed >page where everyone has access. > >Think of the iconic images--like the street execution in Viet Nam by >Eddie Adams or the Kissing photos of Eisenstadt or Doisneau (sp?)--that >have become part of our cultural mythology, not because they are >precious work of art, but because they are both powerful and SEEN via >mass media. > >There is one image by Dmitri Kessel I would like to own an original >print of, maybe one or two by Emil Schultheiss, but beyond that, give me >books (like Ted's). > >Maybe it is just the journalist in me. > >Donal Philby >San Diego Donal- I've no essential quarrel with anything you've said in your post. But as a photographer who makes part of his living through the sale of original prints, it is a little depressing to hear such well-reasoned arguments about why NOT to buy prints coming from fellow photographers. Robert