Sparrow
Veteran
Yes, I just wanted to clarify that I wasn't trying to attack your opinion by critisizing your work. Firstly, I have honestly not really looked at the pictures, secondly I don't believe one has to do with the other. I'm probably only a mediocre photographer but I think I have pretty good taste. (That's why I know all my pictures suck.)
As for Eggleston's stuff being easy to replicate, maybe, but so is The Beatles' music. Influential work always inspires many imitators.
i dont necessarily think that his work is easy to replicate.. there are many who try and most of them fail imo because they only focus on one aspect of his images.
i find the same with Daido Moriyama.. people start taking blurry, high contrast, grainy images of everything to get that "Daido effect" but they miss the whole point of why he does that and what he tries to achieve with his work.
just my opinion of course.
If I ever made a photograph--particularly on 35mm film--as amazing (IMO) as his famous one of the woman stirring a cocktail on an airplane, I would be reposting it here every day in every thread. And that's just one example. I really think his work is terrific. Obviously not all of it. That would be impossible. But of course I see lot of terrific images here every day too. I think Bill Pierce has made many stunning photographs that routinely leave me amazed. So have lots of others here on RFF who merely consider themselves hobbyists. It's all a matter of taste. It's art.
I, for one, think Eggleston is deserving of his reputation. It's not just his use of color, but also his use of golden hour lighting, and his, at first glance, pedestrian subjects, like supermarkets and strip malls. His photos remind me of the visual equivalent of an early John Updike novel.
But then again, hey, what do I know? To each his or her own.
The Beatles are usually considered the best band ever--or certainly one of them--yet I know people who can't stand them.
... this is the problem I have with him, his supporters simply base his reputation on their good taste and fail to provide any analysis of his work or its place in the canon ...
... as others have pointed out many of us were using colour film at the time and taking mediocre photos free of narrative, that are easily as boring and unimportant in the long term