ghost
Well-known
lol. serrano's shocking? the piss pictures are quaint.
That's it! I feel like someone understands why! I own plenty of SLR's and DSLR's and they are great photographic tools. Matrix metering with my newer Nikon bodies is so good that it is downright scary at times. Instant results with a D200, the ability to shoot a few hundred of a scene experimenting with apeture and focal point and then it not costing me anything if it's a waste of time is cool, having a bag full of any lens I need is nice but there are just times where I get tired of it. RF's slow me down. Make me think. Keep in mind that I don't see the allure of a digital RF. I want film. I want the suprise. Using a Holga just adds to that! It makes it even more fun. Like you I've gone to buying inexpensive expired film (off of eBay for me) or just cheap drug store film to see if I get anything useable. When I do it's a delightful suprise. I honestly believe that digital took alot of the fun out of photography for me.chris91387 said:Hell I even own a Holga and want a lomo. But I don't know why!!!!!! Some of the stuff is so boring and annoying. I swear every time someone comes into the store here asking if I sell them the first thing I think to myself is "great, another imitation photographer who will never learn the art"
hmmm, first time trying to post a quote from a previous post. not sure how it will look so let me apologize in advance.
i do have a lomo, holga and diane and what's cool, to me anyway, is the element of surprise. i don't shoot enough to be able to totally predict what will happen. the light leaks, poor focus, lack of any real control of exposure, etc give me a sense of freewill and not caring. with my slr's and rangefinders i'm more methodical and try to previsualize. with the toy cameras maybe i'll get one really cool/fun picture from a roll. and to make it more "fun", i only buy expired film from ebay.
lately i've been packing one toy camera and one "real" camera when i go somewhere. if time permits i'll grab the plastic and fire off a couple to see what happens.
- chris
To appreciate Ruscha you have to like Pop Art.ghost said:who doesn't get ed ruscha?
Ruscha belongs to a large group of photographers in history taking pictures in a documenatry kind of tradition ....just recording "things" as they are ...... not searching for a subjective thing like "beauty".ghost said:is he necessarily an acquired taste?
Sort of the same epiphany I experienced when I got to see Andrew Wyeth's paintings up-close-and-personal at a retrospective at the WHitney several years back.Chaser said:I had a hard time understanding why people loved Edward Weston so much untill i actually went to a gallery and saw a hundred or so of his prints and Kodachromes.
There's really nothing you "should" get here. It's just as with a Leica or a Deardorff, a pinhole camera, or last week's hot dSLR; whether the medium is film, electrons, a combination of the two (my perference), printing-out paper, or methodically-tortured Polaroid...if the photographer in charge of these tools didn't have something to bring to the party, as it were, there'll be little worth commenting on. Perrsonally, I wouldn't mind having a "Holgaroid" around to mess with once in a while.RdEoSg said:Ok I'm going to list something that isn't a photographer, but you will know what I mean anyways...
I don't get Holga and lomo photography!
I know I should. I know its about just shooting and not being restricted to rules and so forth. I know its about the art and not about having the most expensive, best, whatever gear on the planet.
Correct...and hers was the first body of an individual's work I studied as a young'un many years back (followed immediately by Paul Strand...my teacher must have been a mean college baseball pitcher in another life). Also scared the living daylights out of me, but the work was compelling at the same time. She's been lumped together with the rest of what I've called the "third-rail school" of photography, but unlike quite a few others (Arthur Tress, Les Krims, and a bit of Mapplethorpe's work come to mind here; Witkin fits here too, with a Baroque approach that seems to channel de Sade and Pasolini in one stroke), shock value was but one element of her work, as far as I'm concerned (although most of my friends and collegues hate her work).patashnik said:Diane Arbus' work usually scares the living **** out of me. But, then again, that is probably good, right?
AOI Photo said:Diane Arbus.
My vote for most overrated photographer of all time.
No. There are artists I find overrated and get, and those I don't get and do not think are overrated.fitzihardwurshd said:Not to get her ( which was the original question) and to find her overrated are two different things tho.
This sounds as if you would find everything overrated what you don't get ?😕
Fitzi
chris91387 said:i'll gladly stand up and defend ansel adams any day of the week. if it weren't for that fact that he's been shoved down our throats for so long (pretty much my entire life) i think he'd be thought of differently. i've seen his original work up close and his prints are breathtaking. the details in the blacks and whites and everything in between are exceptional. the attention to detail he spent with every picture (or at least the one's we've seen), his technical books ("camera", "negative", "print") are very imformative, his conservationist activitites, etc. i blame the endless calendars, notecards and crappy plastic framed posters to any backlash against him and his work. his explanations of filters, previsualization, zone system, exposure were instrumental in my understanding and love of photography. his pictures are simply inspiring and lovely.
and yes, his portraits are beautiful. but karsh is still my favorite from that era. bring back those hard tungesten lights!!!
- chris
i wonder what else geddes and wegmen have done besides dogs and kids? i bet they're quite good but overexposure just ruined them for the rest of us.
I think the problem is that "get" is a pretty fluid term, and we all read it to mean slightly (or not so slightly 🙂 ) different thingsJohn Camp said:If 'getting' an artist requires an intellectual process, then I'd say 'getting' somebody is almost a sure sign that he or she is mediocre. Serious artists tend to reach off the wall and pull you in. Ansel Adams was serious -- all kinds of people are hit by Moonrise and Clearing Winter Storm and a few more, without any further information at all. That's why his calendars have been best-sellers for thirty years. If you don't get him, I don't think the problem is with Adams.
JC
Yes, sort of like "grok" (yes, now I drag Heinlein into this mess), which is, perversely, probably closer to what I try to mean with all this. (I also take to heart Simon Larby's remark about reducing one's personal take on a given artist to a Siskel & Ebert "thumb(s)-up/down" contest, even though we're all dangerously clost to doing just that here.) Reducing one's response to another's work to a twenty-words-or-less snapshot is truly asking for it, but in a forum like this, I like to think the exercise can be a springboard for someone to consider (or reconsider!) an artist he or she might have brished off before really getting to know them. Art is at least as messy as politics, but fewer people get shot in the process (Andy Warhol notwithstanding).AOI Photo said:I think the problem is that "get" is a pretty fluid term, and we all read it to mean slightly (or not so slightly 🙂 ) different things