Nick De Marco
Well-known
Just back from the Salgado exhibition, Genesis, at the National History Museum. Some astonishing large black and white prints there by one of our greatest living photographers. Seeing them in books or online cannot do justice - if you can you must go to see the prints.
Salgado is a wonderful man, as well as a brilliant artist and photographer. I have loved his work for years and it is such a pleasure to see his prints close up. So forgive me for getting technical, but I could not help noticing the rather obvious differences in the prints on display. I had heard he changed from using Kodak Tri-X film to Canon digital and converting to make the files look like Tri-X, but walking round the exhibition I thought I could really notice the difference. the tri-X prints, usually 2009 or before, were much more grainy yet mostly much more evocative to me. The digital ones, which appeared to be most of not all those after 2009, were still astonishing works but seemed a little cleaner and less grainy, and that seemed to take them a step away from the mystique that Salgado has created in much of his work, including much in the exhibit, with his amazing use of grain and contrast. I was left with a very strong feeling that I much preferred his film prints to his digital ones - which I had not expected - and was surprised just how obvious the differences between the two appeared.
Salgado is a wonderful man, as well as a brilliant artist and photographer. I have loved his work for years and it is such a pleasure to see his prints close up. So forgive me for getting technical, but I could not help noticing the rather obvious differences in the prints on display. I had heard he changed from using Kodak Tri-X film to Canon digital and converting to make the files look like Tri-X, but walking round the exhibition I thought I could really notice the difference. the tri-X prints, usually 2009 or before, were much more grainy yet mostly much more evocative to me. The digital ones, which appeared to be most of not all those after 2009, were still astonishing works but seemed a little cleaner and less grainy, and that seemed to take them a step away from the mystique that Salgado has created in much of his work, including much in the exhibit, with his amazing use of grain and contrast. I was left with a very strong feeling that I much preferred his film prints to his digital ones - which I had not expected - and was surprised just how obvious the differences between the two appeared.