Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On Wed, 22 Sep 1999 23:36:52 +0200, Anthony Atkielski <anthony@atkielski.com> wrote: >From: Jem Kime <jem.kime@cwcom.net> >Sent: Wednesday, September 22, 1999 20:32 >Subject: RE: [Leica] Sunlight in the lens > > >> If you had half an inclination for the possibilities of >> photography in that beautiful city of yours, Paris, then >> you'd know that the greatest 'night photographer' of them >> all, Brassai, created a master volume of work, 'Paris by >> Night', without recource to Noctilux, Leica or anything >> available to you now. > >Not necessarily. I like to take photographs; I don't like to read about them. >There are a few names I recognize, but I'm not a great worshiper of other >photographers. No two photographers are the same, and while I admire the work >of others, that doesn't mean that looking at their work would necessarily make >mine any better. It's a matter of talent, not imitation. You are kidding, right? You really don't like looking at other photographers' work? You must realize that virtually no creative idea springs full-grown from the forehead of Zeus - they all have seeds somewhere. While those seeds need not be the work of other photographers (they could be works of literature, music, mathematics or even news stories), the work of other photographers is one of the fastest ways to experiment mentally with different style and content ideas. For instance, I went to an evening at the camera club last night, and was treated to the most egregious display of double-exposed, slide-sandwiched tricks-massquerading-as-art displays I have ever seen. A week before, the latest issue of NatGeo arrived, with David Alan Harvey's *second* Cuba spread. Not looking at the work of other photographers would have deprived me of both those experiences, each of which has served to focus my understanding of what I think is important in photography. In addition, seeing good work (like Harvey's) serves as a marvelous antidote for complacency. Just when you think you're getting pretty good, along comes someone who reminds you to keep trying harder. Not look at other photographers work? That's like a physicist who doesn't like reading about experiments in the literature. What an astonishing attitude! Paul Chefurka