I genuinely fail to understand why anyone would pay a lot of money for a print. ...
It's obvious that some of the posters have a different view. I'm trying to work out why they hold that view. :confused:[/QUOTE said:
"A lot" can mean many different things to different people. Most folks in the US would probably consider Adams' Special Edition Prints too much money to spend on photography, and they only ring in at $295. Certainly, most people would consider Sexton at $1,200 to be a lot of money. But there are those for whom Clift and (Robert) Adams are not too much even in excess of $10k. And there's the upper tiers of collectors that are dropping in excess of $50k on vintage prints. So, what exactly are we talking about here in this thread in regard to "a lot?" The whole conversation is rather pointless without a benchmark.
Regarding "genuinely fail[ing] to understand why anyone would pay a lot of money for a print," I think there are at least two ways to look at it--Return on Investment and enjoyment. Certainly you can understand that it was a good idea for people to buy Adams' or Brett Weston's or Imogen Cunningham's prints in the late 70's. Those folks spent a couple of hundred, at most, which was probably "a lot" of money to them at the time, and they reaped at least 10 fold, and many reaped in the range of 100 fold. So, the first answer to the "why" question is that, when choosing wisely, it can put dollars in your pocket. (Please note that I say this without endorsing buying photography as an investment. I think it is better purchased for enjoyment.) The second is pure enjoyment. Let's take a Sexton print for example. You could spend $1,200 on one of his prints and hang it in your living room and see and enjoy it for the rest of your life (and if you ever decide to sell it, you'd likely recoup most of your 'investment' (near-term) or even make some money (long-term)). Or, for that same $1,200, you could take a few days of a nice vacation, eat out with your spouse/significant other a dozen times, go to a half dozen sporting events, or buy a large tv that will hit the landfill in a few years. The point is simply that there are a myriad of ways people spend "a lot" of money on enjoyment and if you enjoy looking at a particular print, I'd hope you might understand how it could outweigh the value of some other enjoyment-expenditure.