Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/04/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On 30 Apr 97, ted grant <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> wrote: <much snipped> > Final solution? Get money and publish your own book! Then you only > have yourself to blame if you loose your money because no one buys > it! Quite frankly it is a great eye opener when you have had several > books published and they don't have people jumping off buildings to > buy them. Ah c'mon, Ted. Are you saying that grants from the government are not necessary? How quaint in today's world. > In the real world of publishing there are some "art publishers" who > will wing a book and if it looks like it is on a roll for sales once > out on the street, they'll print more. But these peole do very few > non-profit making publications, they don't do it out of the goodnss > of their hearts, despite sometimes we think they should publish > because, "Damn my work is the most beautiful photography in the > World!" :) Thank you, thank you, thank you, Ted, for your bang on comments on how the free enterprise system works with respect to photography. If photos are so complex and sophisticated that it requires cognoscenti to appreciate them, they are doomed to be the playthings of only the cognoscenti. If, on the other hand, they strike a chord with the proletariat, they will then, indeed, be works of art! Some years ago I located a magnum of Ch. Mouton Rothschild, 1929. With a lovely poached salmon and rack of lamb, we enjoyed this bottle with 11 other couples. It was showcased against 11 other bottles of very highly regarded clarets. The Mouton and only the Mouton, however, when uncorked, filled the room with its exquisite bouquet. It *did not* require "time in type" to appreciate this truly great bottle. It's the lesser bottles that require knowledge and experience to make an informed decision as to which are worth cellaring. This knowledge and experience is called teaching in other fields. Necessary, for the aspirants to greatness, but not for the great! Ok, ok, the evening was captured by very ordinary record shots from an M3! (Whew, almost forgot what list I was on.) - -- Roger Beamon Naturalist & Photographer Docent: Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum Leica Historical Society Of America mailto:beamon@primenet.com Thought for the day: Concerto (n): a fight between a piano and a pianist.