History of Photo "camps" and Prices
2002-11-17 by Cleavis
Just a few comments. Paul's earlier rational of pricing, i.e., platinum, silver, inkjet, etc. is founded in logic of economics. That has little bearing in reality of an art market once underway. An individuals work varies in price, as is mentioned in the B&W mag., based on characteristics of that artists standard for quality and output, occasionally medium used and the buying audience of the time. Work long enough and it will vary by era as well. What 'we' think of as an ideal set of tones for, say in a silver print, are the prejudices of our cultural acclimation at the time of technical personal development. The history of photography, short as it is, has had opposing camps at multiple times. Two sets of the strongest were Stieglitz & F. Holland Day (and others), A. Adams & W. Mortensen. To be simplistic, we have inherited the philosophical purpose of photographic art from Stieglitz, the purity of presentation from E. Weston & the tonal spread from A. Adams. Photography has dealt with the dilemma that it is a simple mechanical method (1880-1900's), strived to look like other mediums in art, sought to make use of it's mechanical purity to present marvels of modern design (1920-1940's), documented, commented or provided introspective viewpoints. This does not even factor in the impacts of the ID in Chicago, advertising or the commercial viability of photographic materials at different points. I write this only to remind myself that the image itself & my desire to convey, is what dictates the parameters of the objects qualities. The market will accept it at a price unrelated to my efforts. Make an image the way you want to, because you want to. I am not an "I'm ok, you're ok" or recovery group guy (not to disparage). Instead encourage people to be familiar with the history of their interest; it has likely been addressed similarly before. Our current situation with the acceptance of inkjet certainly has. Cleavis