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Indeed, at Arles, the motto of many appears to be, "If you can't make it good, make it big."
So big prints are to art photographers nowadays what shallow DOF is to gearhead photographers? 😀
Indeed, at Arles, the motto of many appears to be, "If you can't make it good, make it big."
So big prints are to art photographers nowadays what shallow DOF is to gearhead photographers? 😀
So big prints are to art photographers nowadays what shallow DOF is to gearhead photographers? 😀
What a terrible experience. I would have loved to look at the photos, but instead I had to play some sort of Wolfenstein 3D clone with a weak story line.Besides, if you look at his body of work (http://thomasstruth25.com) you can see loads of images the aesthetic quality of which would probably be contested by few.
What a terrible experience. I would have loved to look at the photos, but instead I had to play some sort of Wolfenstein 3D clone with a weak story line.
You're making a distinction between form and content which this kind of photography means to challange. The point of this kind of large format photography that emerged in the late 20th century is exactly that it is made for the wall, to be exhibited in a certain size with the spectator standing in front of it. You should not distinguish between the image itself and the format for the format is a crucial part of the image...
I see the point. My conclusion is, we should discuss this topic only in front of the original at the wall of an exhibition. Looking at the small web copies or book illustrations doesn't make sense if big format is the crucial aspect here. Maybe I would change my mind on the "boring" images too after I saw it in original size... 😕
I can give you an example:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/megapickle1/5218328139/in/set-72157621283079446/
Blow that crap up to 40"x50" (from a 6x9 neg.) and it´s really impressive. And I can give you the story behind (concept) too.
Cheers
George
Hi Juan!
First, I have to commit, I like Thomas Struth and his work, period. Specially his early work the family portraits are really great. You can feel the hell behind the harmony.
Today art means large format, very large format. I also like Neo Rauch and his huge paintings. And there is the diffenrece.... if you look at Neo´s paintings as photos in a catalogue they have the same impact. If you look at Thomas´s pictures in a catalogue you´ll miss something.
What my statement above (about my crappy unleveled pic.) was, that I made a 40x50 digital print of it and I was impressed. This picture was really touchy.
The big sized prints in museums or galleries are not primarly caused by the artist but by the galleries. So they are really more "impressive" to the spectators. It is marketing or business. Nobody is looking on photographs in normal sizes (10 x 20) in a gallery.
My 2 cents
George