interesting Gursky article

Okay Peter, I'll bite.

Here is Redemption, one of my latest digital collages. Film and digital images seamlessly collaged in Photoshop. I welcome the comparison on the technical and content level. You can see more of my work on my web site.
 

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I'm not sure Charlie how different your work would be when viewing a print against viewing online, but I really don't feel anyone can have anything worthwhile saying if they haven't seen Gursky's work in the flesh. They really are a different thing up close.

I found them quite mesmerising, they create their own atmosphere that's difficult to describe really, but they're art works that use part of the photographic process, I didn't see them as photographs in themselves.
 
Bobby,

I am not saying I find nothing in Gursky's work, but I do value unique personal vision over strategy and concept in any art. In the end. it's what speaks to each of us. I was merely pointing out the irony that the curators I showed my work to in the 1990s devaluied it because it was seamless collage ,and now the most valued photograph in the world is being praised for the same quality. Peter's comment suggested the work of any photographer who was critical of his work, would only serve to reinforce Gursky's position. I just wanted to show that you can use high technical skill with the medium and say something meaningful as well, not just create an atmosphere. Nothing wrong with atmosphere, but it does not trump meaning for me.
 
Okay Peter, I'll bite.

Here is Redemption, one of my latest digital collages. Film and digital images seamlessly collaged in Photoshop. I welcome the comparison on the technical and content level. You can see more of my work on my web site.

thanks for sharing. interesting work. but i think it doesn't make much sense, to compare it with the work of other artists, and make some kind of competition, which is "better". especially when they are so different, made with different intentions.

my comment was more about real snapshots. in such discussions you often here the picasso-argument (my child paints such things too in the kindergarten) in different versions.
 
Bobby,

I am not saying I find nothing in Gursky's work, but I do value unique personal vision over strategy and concept in any art. In the end. it's what speaks to each of us. I was merely pointing out the irony that the curators I showed my work to in the 1990s devaluied it because it was seamless collage ,and now the most valued photograph in the world is being praised for the same quality. Peter's comment suggested the work of any photographer who was critical of his work, would only serve to reinforce Gursky's position. I just wanted to show that you can use high technical skill with the medium and say something meaningful as well, not just create an atmosphere. Nothing wrong with atmosphere, but it does not trump meaning for me.

I think the curators you spoke to were just behind the curve, which was unfortunate for you, but not surprising.
I would not define Gursky's work by a technique though. He also has un-manipulated images in his portfolio which display the same 'unique personal vision' as you call it. He typically uses Photoshop to amplify the essence of a scene, to make it more like he experienced it than it may be in reality. I would not put that down to stategy and concept. His straight images are recognizable Gursky's. The manipulated ones are more so.
I think the image you posted is too different in what it is trying to do to meaningfully compare.
 
i understand, when someone, looking at photographs of gursky, struth, becher, shore and many others, at first finds them banal.
i always appreciate it then, when someone posts a photo made by himself, of which he thinks it has the same substance.

Dear Peter,
It seems to me you have the answer to your own question in your own post. I guess some people (including myself too) who find Gursky's work banal don't shoot pictures that has the same substance because of that very reason - it's banal!. It is great you like this kind of work, but please don't try to make everyone like it. Don't be so offensive, everyone has his/her own taste, let it be 🙂

I find Gursky's work banal too, and yes, I have seen his works in person and it didn't make me somehow like it more 🙁


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Regards,

Boris
 
Don't know if this is reasonable/possible Fred, but could you mention what makes Gursky's work interesting for you?
Thanks,
Mike
 
Read the introduction... The very first sentence:

After the big retrospective in the MoMA 2001, a new big show in the Munich ‘Haus der Kunst’ is dedicated to the photographer whose ’99 cent II Diptychon’ (1999) has recently been auctioned at Sotheby’s for $3,346,456 – the highest price ever paid for a photograph: Andreas Gursky.


Money. That sets the tone of the article - how on earth Gursky can be worth that much...
 
Read the introduction... The very first sentence:

After the big retrospective in the MoMA 2001, a new big show in the Munich ‘Haus der Kunst’ is dedicated to the photographer whose ’99 cent II Diptychon’ (1999) has recently been auctioned at Sotheby’s for $3,346,456 – the highest price ever paid for a photograph: Andreas Gursky.


Money. That sets the tone of the article - how on earth Gursky can be worth that much...

What does it matter, it's not your money.
 
Partly because it is part of my artistic culture and discourse -- for a very long time, at least 40 years?

But I can no more help you like it, than I could pick out a wife for you.

I can say that its visual presence is simply enjoyable.

Thanks. My friends who are artists often ask what I see (or what questions come up) when looking at a river, and I do the same to them. I'm always curious....
 
I believe Valdas wanted to say exactly what she (if I am not mistaking) wrote "how on earth Gursky can be worth that much", because before hitting the jackpot there was no threads about him and his "art" 🙄
Go figure 😀

Regards,

Boris
 
I believe Valdas wanted to say exactly what she (if I am not mistaking) wrote "how on earth Gursky can be worth that much", because before hitting the jackpot there was no threads about him and his "art" 🙄
Go figure 😀

Regards,

Boris

🙂
Correct
 
I'm genuinely confused. Normally one would say 'how on earth can Gursky be worth that much', the meaning of which would be that you were incredulous that anyone would pay such a sum.
You have actually written "how on earth Gursky CAN be worth that much", which I would take as a preamble to justifying the value.
Which did you mean?
 
Lynn thanks for posting the link to that interesting article.

I will say that I like some of Gursky's work, but am not blown away by it - that said, I have not seen his prints up close. I didn't think much of Monet's haystacks until I saw them in person.

Paul, you think the article is too long, believe me as a piece of academic discourse it is mercifully brief and to the point. ;-)

Randy
 
I'm genuinely confused. Normally one would say 'how on earth can Gursky be worth that much', the meaning of which would be that you were incredulous that anyone would pay such a sum.
You have actually written "how on earth Gursky CAN be worth that much", which I would take as a preamble to justifying the value.
Which did you mean?

If you read carefully, those were not my words, I was summing up the tone of the article...
 
The thing is, if I have a darkroom print from any of the great photographers living or dead, it's not so much better than a good quality print from a book by the given photographer.
The print quality will be better, but not so much as to change the fundamentals of the image [I know that's a huge generalisation but bear with me].
The difference with a Gursky is the print is a completely different experience from seeing it reproduced elsewhere. That makes it more of a unique artefact, and hence a better commodity.
They lend themselves well to being traded for high values in the same way as paintings, but this shouldn't be confused with worth as art, there has to be a link between the two, but they're not the same thing.
 
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