tomalophicon
Well-known
He probably did use digital. He only died in 2004. I reckon he secretly bought himself a Kodak P&S and took self-portraits in mirrors and every shop window...
He'd definitely post iPhone shots to a Tumblr. Or maybe just to Instagram.
Everyone is HCB now.
Dear Séan,
But the second half of the statement is not conditional. Rephrase it as "...he could be an American," and it is true.
We have at least one philosophy student in our midst and I'd be interested to hear their take on this.
Dear Jamie,Ha 🙂
I actually thought about it earlier and I think it's not correct. If we construct a counterfactual conditional so that it incorporates a logical impossibility then it's definitely not valid. If I say "If I had a million dollars, circles would be square", then there is no way that the consequent (square circles) could follow from the antecedent (me having a million dollars) becoming true. Also, I think truth isn't really a property of conditionals, as, strictly speaking, a conditional does not state neither truth of falsehood. Conditionals can be valid or invalid ('valid' means that the truth of the consequent necessarily follows from the truth of the antecedent). A conditional states that a certain cosequent follows from an antecedent, i.e. that IF certain premises are true, a certain conclusion follows, but the conditional itself does not state the factuality of its premises or conclusions.
What can be true or false is an argument containing a conditional.
If I construct an argument in the form of:
Premise 1: If A is the case, B follows.
Premise 2: A is the case.
Conclusion: B is the case.
Then it becomes clear that the first premise, i.e. the conditional, does not state any facts.
Aaanyways, so much for formal logic. I suspect what you had in mind, Roger, was the rule that anything follows from a contradiction, often referred to in it's latin form "ex falso quodlibet".
I picked this out of his NY Times obit:
-- And later, explaining his dislike of the automatic camera, he said: "it's like shooting partridges with a machine gun."
It is not clear to me what "automatic camera" means (maybe motorized film advance?) but it does not sound like he would be enamored of current rapid-fire digitals. Elsewhere in the article it is pointed out that when shooting the Paris student uprising, he only took four or five frames an hour. That is truly Zen-like.
Of course, people are not consistent, especially in hypothetical scenarios.
I think Nick's poll opened up a lot of interesting conversation. M
Randy
Most relevant/enlightening post to the initial question. Great info. Thanks Randy!
So it's settled then: film with a manual camera.
Note only that I think you're right, not that I'm sure.
Actually, Nick, I think you may be the one who's missing the point.But I will say, kidding aside, and of course you can never prove it, if HBC was alive today he probably would shoot digital, probably would chimp, probably wouldn't shoot a rangefinder... And as f16sunshine estutely points out, would most likely upload to Flickr and get lost there... semilog also is correct that he might be tooling around with a Nikon D40 and a 35/1.8 prime. I don't think the X100 because he clearly preferred the 50mm focal length.
To others who think he'd be scratching at his coffin - I don't think he'd "hate digital", I think he'd embrace it. He was a prolific shooter, and digital is conducive to this and more economical.
Same applies to those who say he'd "go back to painting"... (see above). Why would you think this?
To those who think this is a silly question - it is. But there is some merit behind the silliness. Many people who were inspired to whatever degree by the great street shooters of the past wanted to "make pictures like them"... and rushed out to buy the exact same equipment - still available. But it wasn't about the type of equipment used - ever. He selected what he thought was best suited among the contemporary product choices. He didn't choose to shoot with old technology, again, most certainly available in his day.
The last cameras used by HCB were a Leica CL and then a C2 (?) if I remember; these in the years after his retirement. However I am more inclined to believe if a CL was available in his active years then he would be preferring it over the M3; due to compact size and being less conspicuous. (That is, if he were to opt for digital in our day then he'd rather go with a compact and simple camera with fast AF.)
I picked this out of his NY Times obit:
-- And later, explaining his dislike of the automatic camera, he said: "it's like shooting partridges with a machine gun."
It is not clear to me what "automatic camera" means (maybe motorized film advance?) but it does not sound like he would be enamored of current rapid-fire digitals. Elsewhere in the article it is pointed out that when shooting the Paris student uprising, he only took four or five frames an hour. That is truly Zen-like.
Of course, people are not consistent, especially in hypothetical scenarios.
I think Nick's poll opened up a lot of interesting conversation.
Randy
The man died in 2004. Lets move on.
Actually, Nick, I think you may be the one who's missing the point.
The past is a different country. I can no longer shoot the stuff I shot in the 60s and 70s, 'cause it ain't the 60s and 70s any more, and I couldn't shoot the 30s 'cause I wasn't alive then.
In other words, when you shoot is to a very considerable extent more important than what you shoot with. Today, a 30-year-old HCB might be a trustafarian, an Occupy protester, the director of the family company (if it had survived), or, well, anything, really. The camera is pretty damn' trivial, compare with all the other variables.
Today, I remembered an old Party anthem:
Lift up the people's banner
Now trailing in the dust.
A million hearts will rally
To guard its sacred trust.
With steps that never falter
And steps that grow more strong,
'Til victory crowns our efforts
Proudly we march along.
The intriguing thing is, this song is at least as applicable to the Occupy movement as to the Party: arguably more so.
Politics are far from irrelevant. Remember that HCB produced a movie for the Abraham Lincoln Brigade during the Spanish Civil War, a major antifascist/anti-reactionary struggle. Maybe he'd be more into politics today, too...
Or maybe he'd be a photographer like Vanessa Winship. Anyone know what cameras she uses? 'Cause I don't. Nor do I care. Same for Martin Parr. Why deify equipment?
Cheers,
R.
But the crux of the question is... do you think he would choose traditional tools - his Leica with a 50mm prime? Or would he choose one of the modern alternatives because they're better suited tools for his vision? would still shoot film.