This subject has come up a few times over the years and during one of these conversations Bill make a very succinct statement.
"Nobody has ever hung a negative on a wall in a gallery or museum."
This really gets to the heart of the matter.
Taking the picture is only half the journey. A photo really only exists once it has been printed and exists in the physical world, manipulated to the final vision of the photographer.
Ansel Adams said that the negative is the score and the print the performance. That really sums it up perfectly.
Mozart wrote The Magic Flute, but until it is performed and brought to life, it’s merely ink on paper.
I haven’t printed in about 20 years, mainly because I didn't have the space for a darkroom, but also because shooting and life got in the way. And I am not a master darkroom printer. In addition the cost of sending out a few hundred negatives to be scanned on a professional scanner was prohibitive. So, it never got done.
But I’ve always kept an eye on the advances in inkjet printing and other technologies.
About two years ago I came across a Hasselblad X5 scanner for sale at a very attractive price. I quickly did the math, calculating the cost of 300 scans at a service bureau vs the purchase. A week later the scanner was sitting on my desk and I’ll be driving my current car for another year.
I spent weeks scanning negatives and invested in a Piezography Pro black and white inkjet printing system for my Epson P800.
Printing turned out to be something of a magical experience. Not quite as magical as the first time I saw a print appear in a pan of developer, but still; it was pretty thrilling to finally see these images tacked to a wall, as the work prints accumulated.
For economic reasons I made the work prints on 8.5x11 paper, but the final images will be printed larger.
It took about 4 months of non-stop work to get through roughly 100 prints, but it was a sight to behold.
I had settled on a selenium toned neutral ink set and printed on Hahnemühle Photo Rag Baryta Paper. The quality of the the prints that Piezo Pro can achieve on this paper are pretty astonishing and have the look of a very well executed gelatin silver print. It is amazing how far this technology has advanced over the years and what your average consumer can now purchase for a reasonable price.
The only catch was that my Epson 800P printer was producing ‘pizza wheel’ marks on the prints, as the paper swelled up from soaking up the ink. So, I needed a new printer with a pneumatic transport system and I preemptively spent my tax return on an Epson P6000 printer. Once again I made the calculation of sending out for prints and purchasing the printer. I pulled the trigger on Black Friday and a week later a friend and me were manhandling a 250lbs printer up the staircase into my apartment…
I’m now making the final push to print the full-size finals and it’s pretty thrilling. It’s a little strange to see these images that so far only lived on my screen hanging on the wall. But it’s really exciting.
On a side note one interesting possibility of the Piezo Pro system is the ability to generate a digital negative on a transparency for making things like platinum contact prints. That certainly is something I would like to explore down the road...
One positive side effect of printing is that in some ways it has cured my paranoia of shooting digital. A RAW file only exists as a bunch of electrons on a hard drive. If the hard drive goes it takes the image with it forever. Even with backups it’s a little unnerving and in my day job I have seen ungodly amounts of data get lost. So, I know it happens- all the time. But having a physical print in hand really goes a long way to soothing that fear.
Anyhow, I’m a big believer in prints and really recommend it to anyone who is serious about their photographic endeavors.
You can see the results here
www.thelatentimage.net