Helen B
TPF Noob!
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2007
- Messages
- 3,296
- Reaction score
- 467
- Location
- Hell's Kitchen, New York
- Can others edit my Photos
- Photos NOT OK to edit
What I mean is that any coverage I see of large format always has a sort of fetishistic feel to it. Not like sexual, or particularly obsessive, but "worshipful of the object for its magical powers" type of fetishism. The reporter, the curators, whatever, act as if the large format camera and the process around it is soooo awesome. Partly I suppose it's a byproduct of conceptual art; they're elevating process over results. The process is certainly interesting, but personally don't feel that it's any "better" than using a cell phone camera (although they might get woozy over that too -- it's the mainstream ordinary camera that gets short shrift). It's just different.
What I mean is that any coverage I see of large format always has a sort of fetishistic feel to it. Not like sexual, or particularly obsessive, but "worshipful of the object for its magical powers" type of fetishism. The reporter, the curators, whatever, act as if the large format camera and the process around it is soooo awesome. Partly I suppose it's a byproduct of conceptual art; they're elevating process over results. The process is certainly interesting, but personally don't feel that it's any "better" than using a cell phone camera (although they might get woozy over that too -- it's the mainstream ordinary camera that gets short shrift). It's just different.
I AM ALMOST POSITIVE you have never peered through a top-quality loupe at an 8x10 chrome atop a quality lightbox... if you think 8x10 is more about "proces" than results, you're sadly misinformed. The abilities that an 8x10 camera with full movements produce results that are indeed "sooooo awesome" that they make people truly relish viewing images made using that process.
I have and I do.
I understand pretty thoroughly what it is and is not good at, and I am not talking about the kind of image quality that can be obtained from it. What I am talking about this the apparent artistic merit that working in LF supposedly brings. I am talking about the attitude art journalists and art curators seem to bring when they talk about it.
Yes, LF is interesting and different, yes it brings the effective pixels in spades. Yes, wiggles are great. Yes, the contact print looks and feels qualitatively different and more buttery than anything else. I truly get that.
None of this is really what I'm talking about, though.
I'm talking about the way the commentators elevate the process over the result. It bugs me, that's all.
EDIT: Derrel, you're a scholar and a gentleman, a fine fellow, but how on earth did you so badly misread me? I am not elevating process over results, I am complaining that OTHER people are, and I wish they would not!
What I mean is that any coverage I see of large format always has a sort of fetishistic feel to it. Not like sexual, or particularly obsessive, but "worshipful of the object for its magical powers" type of fetishism. The reporter, the curators, whatever, act as if the large format camera and the process around it is soooo awesome. Partly I suppose it's a byproduct of conceptual art; they're elevating process over results. The process is certainly interesting, but personally don't feel that it's any "better" than using a cell phone camera (although they might get woozy over that too -- it's the mainstream ordinary camera that gets short shrift). It's just different.
What I mean is that any coverage I see of large format always has a sort of fetishistic feel to it. Not like sexual, or particularly obsessive, but "worshipful of the object for its magical powers" type of fetishism. The reporter, the curators, whatever, act as if the large format camera and the process around it is soooo awesome. Partly I suppose it's a byproduct of conceptual art; they're elevating process over results. The process is certainly interesting, but personally don't feel that it's any "better" than using a cell phone camera (although they might get woozy over that too -- it's the mainstream ordinary camera that gets short shrift). It's just different.
Uhhhh, so "I misread you", eh???? You say that you, " personally don't feel that it's any "better" than using a cell phone camera (although they might get woozy over that too -- it's the mainstream ordinary camera that gets short shrift). It's just different.
Dude...you are trying to blame ME for mis-reading you? Perhaps you might go back and re-read what you wrote and ponder possible meaning(s) your readers might take away from your flippant dismissals and casual,broad, pejorative statements equating 8x10 work with cell phone snappies. Perhaps????
Me, having misread YOU??? Sorry..I think the onus is on you...