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He used to say that 90% of taking a photograph is darkroom work.Does that mean 90% of a great photo today is done on the computer?
Tip for those who've not seen his works in person and are either: not moved by them; or cannot understand the hub-bub surrounding them; or perhaps don't agree that photography should even be considered an art form - you need to see them in person. I thought/felt all of these doubts until I saw an exhibit of the originals in person. OMG. Phenomenal. Do yourself a favor and go see some - the originals, not copies.
It's always good to see original prints in person. Even the highest quality litho's can't do justice to a great metal on paper print.Beside the Adams gallery in SF, another great place to see original photos is "a gallery" in New Orleans. Fantastic place.Not a lot of museums tend to have photos. Hmmm maybe another thread there???
I have studied Ansel in the past, read all his books, attended a lecture by one of his assistants, and taken a week-long workshop with another of his assistants, and I don't remember reading that in print, or hearing him quoted as saying that. Not saying he didn't; I could just use some attribution.
The last time I saw his work was last year at the Whitney Museum of which the "Moonrise" was on display
What's amazing about that print is how he managed to get a decent one considering how thin the negative was (apparently he was in a rush and miscalculated the exposure). I took a workshop with his former assistant years back and he showed us the negative and the print recipe...it took a lot of work to get an acceptable print from that image. ...
Man! You got to see the original negative? Lucky you! I'd love to see that and his note, must be lots of dogging and burning there. I remembered watching a documentary somewhere about that. If I recalled correctly he was driving, saw the moon. He stop his car, the sun was setting and loosing light fast. He exposed for the moon because he couldn't find his meter or didn't have enough time or something like that. I think that explain why the negative is so thin. Take care,Buddy
I remember that too. (Perhaps dbCooper will confirm this! )
I'd love to see that and his note, must be lots of dogging and burning there.
Decades ago when I was in a photography-degree program, the AA mantra was "..expose for the shadows, develop for the highlights.." If someone needs extensive post-exposure work to make a photo viewable, they need to work on their pre-exposure craft. ..unless their 'art' is comprised of manipulation..