Firstly, I'm sorry to have brought this topic up again - computer trouble kept me off-line for several weeks and I missed the earlier discussion.
I'm not especially wild about Nimoy's work, but I think Donald's reference to Matisse provides a key to what makes it interesting. Nimoy does seem genuinely aware of wider traditions in art and photography - for example, I find some of the Shekinah pictures recall 19th century psychic photography. He has plainly thought about his art and the effects he hopes to achieve. I do not think that that he is wholly successful, but I'm oddly reminded of the music of William Shatner, in its "failure" nearer to real genius than vastly more accomplished works. One may like his pictures or one may not, but they seem to the honet work of a serious photographer with a vision of his own.
Cheers, Ian