Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/08/25
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At a recent photo workshop taught by LUGnut David Medley, we all spent an enjoyable evening at his house consuming pizza and listening to violin and piano sonatas played live. His wife is a professional violinist of considerable talent, and two of us at the seminar were sufficiently good enough on the piano to make a passable stab at accompanying her. Anyway the evening got me to thinking about the similarities between cameras as a tool for artistic purposes and musical instruments. Trying to frame my thoughts aloud, I got tangled in a discussion of the word "instrument": is it a tool, or a device for artistic purposes? David came down strong on the tool side (it must be those years he spent photographing car parts for catalogs), I came down on the artistic side. Well I looked up "instrument" in the dictionary, and one of the meanings of instrument is: "a tool or implement, especially one used for delicate work or for scientific or artistic purposes." Webster's New Twentieth Century Dictionary Unabridged 2nd edition. So an instrument is both, and I definitely think of a Leica as a fine instrument. Now I realize my point: using a small camera (and especially a Leica) for artistic or dramatic purposes is definitely similar to playing a musical instrument. The basic function of the instrument is simple, yet to create artistic output requires years of study, lots of practice, and doses of heavenly inspiration. Also like a musical instrument, there is a certain level of quality required in the instrument before you can create consistently artistic results--yet that quality alone does not guarantee the results--you still need all the practice and study. A beginner playing a magnificent grand piano can certainly play one note which is beautiful in itself, but cannot play steadily enough to make even a simple melody sing. A beginning photographer with a new Leica M6 and lens can create an image which is beautifully exposed and has wonderful color contrast, but the image is not likely to be beautiful or moving. It is especially difficult to create images which are both well framed and capture a decisive moment--a telling frozen instant from the interplay of human expression. Unfortunately, our harried modern lifestyles, filled with work, often leave us with money to buy fine instruments, but not the time to master them. We end up with the instruments, but not enough time to develop our talents. This is a paradox of modern capitalism which is worth pondering. I wonder how many fine cameras are bought with the intention to make fine images, but end up filling up closet shelves. Or how many fine pianos grace rooms as beautiful furniture, but sit silent. (I wonder if this issue isn't really at the heart of the autofocus "debate". Automatic cameras are sold with the marketing premise that they make it effortless to take great photographs, usually illustrated with family "snapshots" which are very well composed and capture one of those fleeting heart-warming moments in family interaction. In reality it still takes a lot of skill to get those great family snapshots, and sometimes the automation can just get in the way.) All for now. Still struggling to take decent photographs, Mark E. Davison