Lew Lorton (a.k.a. “thetraveler”) posted something that caused me to stop and think. Please check out entry #7 on:
What camera settings in RAW?
I also have had some discussions with a couple of creative people over the past couple of weeks that shared a similar opinion; they will always value their artistic expression over technical quality. I had also read something that Robert Capa, the famed photojournalist and war photographer admitted; that his work was not always at its best, at least from a technical standpoint.
I went back and started looking at some of the “old masters” of photography and found that Capa was being quite honest about failings in his own work, as well as that of, say Erich Salomon and Henri Cartier-Bresson. The reason I looked at their work is they, like Capa were photojournalists, working under conditions that challenged the materials (film) and equipment (camera) that they were using. I can’t find any information regarding how Salamon processed and printed his work, but neither Capa not Cartier-Bresson seemed to have any interest other than taking the picture and then they let someone else take care of producing the final product. All three of these fine photographers used miniature cameras and while they often have work that is well done technically, emotionally and compositionally, at other times that statement is not correct.
As a bit of a counterpoint, I looked at two other photographers from that era; Ansel Adams, the great landscape photographer and Yousef Karsh is often viewed as the greatest portrait photographer. Both of these men shot with large view cameras and were intimately involved in the final product. Adams developed and printed his own work while Karsh employed a negative retoucher and printer, who would work to produce the image that Karsh wanted. From a compositional standpoint and from a technical standpoint, the quality of their work is impeccable.
Now, let’s look at the modern camera, which if you look at it is really a computer that takes pictures. The high level of technical sophistication gives us the capability of shooting in conditions that the old masters wouldn’t have dreamt of. Add to that the ability to do astoundingly sophisticated edits on these images in remarkably little time, I find it astounding that people do not put the creative and technical quality on an equal footing. I’m not writing about pixel-peeping quality either; it’s the soft focus, poor exposure and crooked horizons that I’m seeing. I’m not looking at work from new photographers, but rather from people who keep telling me how good they are at their craft. When I ask, I tend to get told that these are unimportant details and I am missing the artistry in the work.
I guess I must be missing something, but I really suspect that with some people just like taking pictures and either can’t be bothered with the details or don’t want to admit that they don’t know how do things well. Or perhaps, all they really want to do is take pictures… I guess there will always be photographers like Garry Winogrand or Vivian Maier who shot tens of thousands of unprocessed images, that were discovered after they died.
Maybe I just don’t understand. Thoughts? What kind of photographer are you?