Sean Moran
Established
I was in the Museo de Bellas Artes in Seville last week when it occurred to me that many of the superb paintings on show did not rely on having what we might call a 'high resolution'. This term is of course usually associated with lenses (or combinations of lens+film or lens+sensor), but hopefully you know what I mean.
Even this enormous painting of the death of a bullfighter had less optical information than even my worst camera could produce. And the Leica M3 with Summicron I was carrying could out-perform it comfortably - on purely technical criteria.
http://www.photaki.com/picture-pain...master-of-fine-arts-museum-seville_333745.htm
But so far, I haven't managed to make an image with that sort of power. This set me thinking that whatever limits our photography, it isn't our equipment. The comparison with painting is not a fair one, I realise. But many of us have gear that is far better than the 'greats' of photography used.
If you stand close to the painting (the gallery equivalent of pixel-peeping), it's not impressive. But when you first see it from a few metres away, on emerging from a side-gallery, it is breathtaking.
Buying better cameras and lenses will probably not help us to produce masterpieces. Whatever equipment we already have is likely to be good enough. So what is needed? (Apart from learning to paint).
Sean in Tipperary
Even this enormous painting of the death of a bullfighter had less optical information than even my worst camera could produce. And the Leica M3 with Summicron I was carrying could out-perform it comfortably - on purely technical criteria.
http://www.photaki.com/picture-pain...master-of-fine-arts-museum-seville_333745.htm
But so far, I haven't managed to make an image with that sort of power. This set me thinking that whatever limits our photography, it isn't our equipment. The comparison with painting is not a fair one, I realise. But many of us have gear that is far better than the 'greats' of photography used.
If you stand close to the painting (the gallery equivalent of pixel-peeping), it's not impressive. But when you first see it from a few metres away, on emerging from a side-gallery, it is breathtaking.
Buying better cameras and lenses will probably not help us to produce masterpieces. Whatever equipment we already have is likely to be good enough. So what is needed? (Apart from learning to paint).
Sean in Tipperary