Chriscrawfordphoto
Real Men Shoot Film.
Sorry Chris, but I have to disagree. You see, being a creative photographer is not mutually exclusive to being a talented darkroom craftsman, (and because technical manipulations carried out in the darkroom are based on an eye towards ascetics, it can be considered an art in and of itself.)
It's like the tried discussion on old RFF, that you are either a collector OR a photographer, when reasonably one CAN be both. Not mutually exclusive.
Also, I've been considering, as a working concept, the idea that art IS in the process.
But art is so idiosyncratic and personal, that any general comment made will find a plethora of valid exceptions.
Chris, it seems from your experience, you were forced to abandon wet printing due to health considerations. Would you have continued with that process if this didn't happen!
Frank, I don't think you actually read what I wrote. I never denied that it takes skill to be a good darkroom printer. What I said was that those who make idiotic statements about darkroom prints being the only 'real' photography are using process as a crutch because they have nothing more to offer in their work. Ultimately, it is the image that matters. Some people's work, you see the process before the subject. I think that such work ultimately is a failure.
I also said that photographs cannot, by their very nature, be handmade. No matter how much one sticks ones hands in the chemicals, you're still using machine-made materials with factory-made equipment whose technology is beyond the ability of 99.9999% of photographers to replicate themselves. Photography is a completely modern art, reliant on the machine and the engineer, like virtually all that makes the modern world what it is.