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black_silver

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Posts posted by black_silver

  1. I'm a Nikon digital/film camera user myself.

     

    But, if I were starting out again I would seriously think about getting

    a mirror less camera. The lens style QX1 E mount camera by Sony especially,

    because it then opens up usage to Zeiss lenses. With full auto

    abilities, that the ZF.2 lenses lack.

     

    And one uses a cell phone or mini tablet as the remote viewer. Which would come in handy in a crowded concert.

  2. Take Fred's image, there above.

     

    If I saw a real person that color, that grey color. ...

     

    I would expect the person to be dead.

     

    Black and white photos, especially, are not about truth. They can't

    be. It's about tonality on paper or some monitor. Viewers have to

    interpret those photos, change black and white tones to color in

    their mind's eye; based on experiences with the real world.

     

    Also, the person in Fred's photo would be about 8 to 10 inches tall, as sized on the monitor screen I am using. Photos are not truthful.

  3. Anders,

     

    No I don't think most viewers care, or know enough to care.

    These are the same people who look at an Ansel Adams print with blackened red filtered burned in "photo-shopped"

    skies, and say, "He was in the right place at the right time to capture the sky like that".

     

    I admire a great Photoshopper as I do a great red light, wet darkroom, enlarger lit, silver gelatin photo-shopper. The work

    is such that some photographers can't tell, and the general viewership certainly can't tell...that is the signature of an

    awesome Photoshopper. My noting it was not a disparaging point, but a compliment.

     

    I try and appreciate art irrespective of the others in the audience, or the customer base, or the artificial value placed on it

    by that audience and customer base. I try to keep the channel between the artist and myself, uncluttered by others'

    opinions.

  4. The lily is a spiritual symbol of death, in many cultures. By

    photographing herself with this flower, she is foretelling us the

    future, that she will die soon. Just like the angel wings

    metaphorically torn from her body, foretell that she will attempt to

    fly, and attempt to reach the zenith of photographic artistry, but like

    those wings of Icarus they will fail to perform, and she will face

    plant onto the New York sidewalk. The tortoise is a symbol of the

    appreciation of her art, that it would be a long slow process, as we

    know from the Greek fable, the tortoise wins the race.

     

    Tortoise? What's that? You know what a turtle is? Of course! Same thing. I've never seen a turtle... But I understand what you mean. You reach down and you flip the tortoise over on its back. Do you make up these questions, Or do they write 'em down for you?

  5. I actually really don't have any morals in regards to sexuality. I don't think.

     

    My discussion was about their parenting abilities. And gave an example of their absentee parenting.

     

    Which in and of itself is perfect example of how meaning and interpretation and the resulting imputed meaning can be

    opposite.

     

    I reserve the topic of morality for actions that actually hurt or harm people. No one was or is harmed by the naked model photos.

     

    That said, speaking as a 50 year old fat man, I wouldn't be caught dead naked(or clothed) in a photo with a naked

    teenager. Not that I have some morality about it or against it internally. I know that in the society I live in, I could end up in

    jail or killed, or jailed, sodomized, and then killed. I'm too cynical to die for art.

  6. Phil,

     

    Would you let your 16 year old daughter take naked photos with a fat 50 year old naked man?

     

    It was 70s, and all, but seriously. Would you have allowed that in the 70s?

     

     

     

    People deal with grief differently, but listen to mom and pop Woodman talk about Franchesca' art and suicide. Their discussion of competition with her, their self absorbtion, their guilt and rationalization of it.

     

    I wouldn't want these people as friends in real life,.let alone parents. I didn't have model parents myself, growing up at about the same time as Franchesca, they never ever got me to a place where I wanted to swan dive off a roof. Maybe more accurate to say that they were horrible people who happened to be parents?

     

    Betty's clay art seems facile and trite to me.

     

    George's photography of a model who resembles his daughter, using a style similar to hers, is disgusting and morbid to me.

  7. One thing of note is that the larger part of her portfolio is locked up by her parents (estate).

     

    And unreleased.

     

    I wonder what they are concealing by doing this. What art, or what trash is contained in that collection.

     

    Too bad that "The Woodmans" is no longer available on Netflix. It's painfully obvious these two people were horrible parents. Maybe they are equally horrible curators.

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