Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/10/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]HAving seen and admired Adams' work since I started wasting film 30 odd years ago, I have been 'lurking' through this thread. I remember debating the nature of art with a professor many years ago; I was trained as sociologist/psychologist and seemed to seek generic qualities about humankind. It always seemed to me that art was above all, evocative. It invokes some type of viceral, emotional response. This unfortunately includes art that generates revulsion, but if you start to define 'good' art from 'bad' art, then you throw a goodly number of intervening variables into the mix. IMHO, good photographic art has at least some aesthetic qualities- it is pleasing to the eye. I have to be honest in that I find that much of Adams' work, as well as O'keefe's, Stieglitz', Henri Cartier-Bresson's, Ernst Haas', and innumerable other's to be both evocative and pleasing to look at, and if not exactly pleasant- attractive, in that it invites you to study the captured moment. I can still gaze at "Moonrise over Hernandez" and it fascinates me. I think good art survives the test of time- it doesn't please one vogue. It has 'meaning' over generations because it plucks that common thread that connects us to our past, and (hopefully) ties us to our future. Well, that's my $0.02. Dan