Barrett: Art isn't easy. Stephen Sondheim said so.
The medium is the message? Sort of kind of, but sort of kind of not. It depends on what you do with it. Show most people a high-quality film print and a high-quality digital print, they will have no idea which is which. It's not like the difference between, say, movies and TV, or newspapers and radio.
Viewing photos on a computer screen vs. on prints is the kind of difference McCluhan was talking about. But you can view film pictures on the computer, and you can print either film or digital. When we say "digital photography" we're usually talking about using digital capture in the camera. The major change is how the photographer acts and feels, not the viewer.
Digital can be used for exactly the same kinds of things film can be used for. BUT the process is different. The question is how much these differences affect the final result, and how much the fact of shooting digital sends the photographer shooting different things in different ways. The result might be very similar to film, or it might be very different. Because:
* You can have it now.
* You can alter it more easily.
* Once you pay for your camera, shooting seems free.
* You shoot more.
* It looks different from film
* Noise is uglier than grain (IMHO)
* Digital has less highlight detail than neg film.
* It's easier to do something "because I can."
* Playing with digital effects for their own sake lead to new aesthetic standards. Such as preferring smooth, blurry photos to sharp grainy ones (D**n you, C*non!), or thinking it's creative to alter your girlfriend's image with jaundice-yellow skin, flourescent-green hair, high contrast and posteriziation. It isn't really new, people were doing such stuff 40 years ago. But it's easier now, so it seems like everyone is doing it.
It is easy to do bad but technically competent photography digitally. It is much the same amount of effort to do good photography with either.
One of the reasons why I love my M8 is that it helps me shoot "filmishly" on a digital camera. And its B&W look is beautiful. It isn't Tri-X, it's itself. And beautiful.
--Peter