tbm
Established
I was in a camera store this morning which, last night, started displaying a bunch of photographer Steve Anchell's black and white prints in its gallery. I viewed the prints and after leaving the gallery section I asked one of the store's clerks (clerk A) "Do you know what camera and film Steve used to capture those images?". The clerk said he did not. Then another clerk (clerk B), probably in his 60s, happened to walk by and clerk A stopped him and repeated my question to him. Clerk B said to me, "I don't know, but why do you care? It doesn't matter what camera and film he used. Painters never discuss the merits of their brushes, paints, and canvasses, so photographers should not discuss equipment! The only thing that matters in photography is the final result" I then said, "It is erroneous to compare painting with photography. They are so vastly different inasmuch as the former involves brushes, paints, canvasses, and the artist's creative potential and the latter involves camera bodies and lenses, films, developers, and papers on the analog side and then sensor sizes, photosites on the sensors, frame size differences, etc. on the digital side. Plus, there are concerns about lens flaring, lens vignetting, lens bokeh quality, and so on both anaologically and digitally. Plus, gaining a creative eye in photography is different than that required in painting.
An aquaintance recently showed me some images he captured with his $3,000 Canon digital camera and zoom lens and he was quite proud of the results until I showed him burned out highlights and non-existent shadow details on some of his images. I then showed him some Leica-based prints I had created in my darkroom which revealed beautiful highlight density and shadow detail. I then asked my aquaintance why he allowed the clerk who sold him the equipment to sell him a zoom lens rather than one or more prime lenses with the Canon. He was dumbfounded and had no answer.
What would you say to a clerk who insists on comparing photography with painting, Roger?
Terry
An aquaintance recently showed me some images he captured with his $3,000 Canon digital camera and zoom lens and he was quite proud of the results until I showed him burned out highlights and non-existent shadow details on some of his images. I then showed him some Leica-based prints I had created in my darkroom which revealed beautiful highlight density and shadow detail. I then asked my aquaintance why he allowed the clerk who sold him the equipment to sell him a zoom lens rather than one or more prime lenses with the Canon. He was dumbfounded and had no answer.
What would you say to a clerk who insists on comparing photography with painting, Roger?
Terry
