# 5532 / kitchen sink ~ damn it, here we go again

(embiggenable) • iPhone

UNLIKE THE GOOD OL' DAYS IN THE DIGITAL CAMERA WORLD, wherein the upgrade treadmill eventually reached a point of enough-is-enough, a place where one could jump off the treadmill and be very satisfied with the picture making device one had in his/her hand, the treadmill is still moving at top speed in the smartphone picture making device world.

Hence, the new iPhone 12 PRO MAX.

In the "real" camera world, I am quite happy with my 6-7 year old, 16mp camera. Although, when compared to the results I obtain from an iPhone and its hardworking AI, not so much. True be told, I am absolutely stupified by the fact that "real" camera makers seem to be totally oblivious to the picture making AI world. I mean, what the f**k are the waiting for?

In any event, here I sit staring down the barrel of the iPhone 12 PRO MAX get-it-now gun.

The primary reason for that impulse is that a 47% larger sensor (with larger pixels) is a significant improvement. It is also possile that the new Night Mode-applied across more lenses-is also a big improvement. However, the other brand new-perhaps very significant-feature is the Apple ProRAW tool ... (from the Apple site) ProRAW gives you all the standard RAW information, along with the Apple image pipeline data. So you can get a head start on editing, with noise reduction and multiframe exposure adjustments already in place — and have more time to tweak color and white balance.

And here's the thing, Apple image pipeline data is not a preset. It is the AI data specific to that image. They have given a picture maker the ability to customize / override or whatever it is the Apple techs think a picture should look like. I find that very interesting and, maybe, even a little bit brave.

In any event, I will be acquiring an iPhone 12 PRO MAX soon. And, what I am hoping for is that the upgrade might just be good enough to let me get off the treadmill (at least for a while).

# 5523-25 / around the house•kitchen sink•kitchen life ~ a little man

(embiggenable) • iPhone

(embiggenable) • iPhone

(embiggenable) • iPhone

AT THE START OF MY BLOGGING DAYS, and continuing throughout, I always considered part of my blogging mandate-albeit self-imposed-to be to identify and present an exposé of fuzzy-headed notions, re; the medium of photography and its apparatus. Notions / ideas such as...

There are writers on the web who insist that your work will improve if you (doggedly) use one camera and one lens for an entire year but I don't think that's based on anything more than some people being really, really slow learners; or too lazy to try new stuff. I never thought about the damage caused by self-limiting your choices when making art....

So, mandate accepted, here I go again....if there is a "slow learner" at work here, it is the picture maker who issued forth this rather dubious stupid idea. That written, one should expect nothing less from this source inasmuch as this picture maker has not exhibited a single iota of the vision thing in his/her picture making. A situation which, again, should not be a surprise inasmuch as this picture maker is-WARNING: massive understatement-gear obsessed.

That written, here's the thing about the "1 camera / 1 lens" idea. The point of such an exercise-and I am not endorsing / refuting it, per se-is that, if one is looking to identify and refine one's vision, then one is best served by concentrating on: a.) what it is one is trying to accomplish with one's art making, and b) learning how to see rather than to just look. Arguably, one could accomplish both objectives without the use of a camera.

In actual pactice, most picture makers use a camera as part of their search for their vision. However, the idea of walking around with several camera bodies and a bevy of lenses, iMo, only complicates the matter at hand. In a very real sense, it puts the wagon in front of the horse inasmuch as, once one has decided what one is trying to accomplish with one's art (the "horse' that pulls the wagon), then that is the time to decide what kind of wagon is best suited for hitching to the horse.

And, here's a fact-ignore it at your peril-if one's intent is to make fine art in the photography world...consistancy of vision is paramount. You can take it to the bank that 99% of sucessful fine art photographers are practioners of and have mastered the 1-camera / 1 lens concept.

Their work exhibits, not only a consistent vision, but also a consistent technique. A single body of work does not exhibit the use of a wide angle lens in one picture and the use of a telephoto lens in another. One picture is not done in BW and another in screaming HDR color. And, in many cases, all of the pictures in a single body of work are presented in exactly the same print format (square, rectangle, horizontal, vertical, et al).

All of that written, here's my biggest irk....the idea that using 1 camera / 1 lens indicates that a picture maker is "too lazy to try new stuff." That idea implies that "new stuff" is only driven by "new technique", aka: the use of different gear. To which I write, "hogwash" cuz truly "new stuff" is not gear driven, it is driven by a picture maker's imagination.

Consider this from Robert Henri from his book, THE ART SPIRIT. iMo, the best book ever written for aspiring artists of any medium:

The technique of a little individuality will be a little technique, however scrupulously elaborated it may be. However long studied it will still be a little technique; the measure of the man. The greatness of art depends absolutely on the greatness of the artist's individuality and on the same source depends the power to acquire a technique sufficient for expression.

The man who is forever acquiring technique with the idea that sometime he may have something to express, will never have the technique of the thing he wishes to express.

Intellect should be used as a tool.

The technique learned without a purpose is a formula which when used, knocks the life out of any idea to which it is applied.

# 5466-69 / rist camp • kitchen sink • landscape ~ into the sunset?

(embiggenable) • iPhone

(embiggenable) • iPhone

(embiggenable) • iPhone

(embiggenable) • iPhone

AFTER BANGING AROUND TRYING DIFFERENT METHODS OF COLOR>BW CONVERSION, I have discovered / come to the conclusion that the Sanpseed app BW conversion tool is very good. And, surprise, surprise (not), just the mere selection of the tool does the job...no sliders / adjustments / diddling around, the default conversion, aka: neutral, is the just easy-as-pie ticket. And, with a tiny bit of after the fact fine tuning, it looks good to me.

ASIDE "AFTER BANGING AROUND TRYING DIFFERENT METHODS OF COLOR>BW CONVERSION", it felt rather like banging my head against a wall.

On a different topic, I will mention in passing (pun) that 2 long-time photo blogs have folded up their tents and are passing into the great beyond. Those would be The Visual Science Lab-which should have been more accurately named, My Cameras and Gear Obsession Blather and Ming Thein.

Neither site will be missed by me. Re: The Visual Science Lab...even though I did visit it on a fairly regular basis, it was more a matter of idle curosity cuz the site never offer much in the way of good pictures but, on the other hand, you had to give the author credit for being sucessful in making a good living. No easy feat over the long run. Re: the Ming Thein site...I have never been interested in sites that peddle / sell advice on the topic of making good pictures. So, it never caught, much less held, my attention.

That written, time marches on and a once thriving scene of good photo sites has slowly started to fade into irrelevance or flat out disinterest.

# 5441-43 / around the house • kitchen sink ~ it just is

(embiggenable) • iPhone

(embiggenable) • iPhone

(embiggenable) • iPhone

MY 2-BOOKCASE PHOTO LIBRARY IS COMPRISED MAINLY OF INDIVIDUAL PICTURE MAKER'S monographs. However, also included are a goodly number of books devoted to the discussion of the medium and its apparatus* (none of which are about gear or technique). My acquisition and reading of such books was driven my desire to obtain an answer to the question (in my mind), what is a photograph? And, perhaps to an even greater extent, what the hell am I doing when I make photographs? and/or (i>why the hell am I making photographs.

After decades-primarily 2000 onward-of going down rabbit holes and traversing vast, at times tepid wastelands, of thought and theory, re: the medium and its apparatus, I am arriving at a point of enough already. Which is not to imply that I have been wasting my time with such pursuits but rather to indicate that I have come to a few very simple conclusions about the medium and its apparatus...

...re: what is a photograph? A photograph is an actual thing that is, or can be, anything the maker or viewer thereof wants it to be. Hell, it could actually be Art.

...re: what the hell am I doing when I make photographs? I am making a thing (because I make prints) which could actually be Art. Or, it could actually be a waste of ink and paper, depending upon what the viewer decides / wants it to be.

...re: why the hell am I making photographs? Simple answer ...as Robert Adams wrote (from his book, Why People Photograph), "At our best and most fortunate we make pictures because of what stands in front of the camera...", which is, iMo, a kind of "no duh" statement cuz what stands in front of the camera ain't there by accident. It's in front of the camera because the picture maker has deliberately placed the camera in front of the what. And, in my particular case, the question is, why did I place my camera in front of a particular what?

And the fact is that no book I have read has been able to help elucidate the drive / obsession / desire-otherwise known as the "why"-I possess to make pictures of what I see (and place my camera in front of). Without deep diving into psychoanalytical self-analysis (re: the why?), I can write with assurance that, as far back as I can remember in my childhood, I have been making pictures-of one kind or another-of the world around me.

I believe that propensity is embedded in my bones. Call it preternatural. Call it an art gene / marker in my DNA. Call it, as used to be the case, a god-given gift (or is it a curse?). Personally, I don't call it anything. It just is. And, consequently, that is why I make photographs.

*as always, apparatus = conventions and practice.

kitchen life / kitchen sink / # 3689-91 ~ because the individual is different

(embiggenable) • iPhone

(embiggenable) • iPhone

(embiggenable) • iPhone

ThIS WEEKEND PAST I WAS RE-VISITING THE BOOK, ANSEL ADAMS ~IN COLOR. The pictures in the book were curated / chosen by Harry Callahan. Callahan's methodology for making his selections-from nearly 3,000 transparencies-was simple enough ... he stated that he "chose what looks good" and "selected those things that pleased me."

In any event, Adams might be spinning in his grave like a high-speed drill press inasmuch as some of Callahan's selections display evidence of the limitations, tonal range wise, of transparency film. Which is to write, some blown highlights and many blocked-up shadows. That written, those pictures which were not pushing those boundaries, are quite good. In fact, were I to invest in one Adams' print to adorn one of my walls, it would be one of his color pictures.

There are a handful of Adams quotes in the book that are worth publishing here on my blog. However, in the meantime, while reading the text in the Adams book, I remebered this spot-on quote from Harry Callahan....

"The photographs that excite me are photographs that say something in a new manner; not for the sake of being different, but ones that are different because the individual is different and the individual expresses himself. I realize that we all do express ourselves, but those who express that which is always being done are those whose thinking is almost in every way in accord with everyone else. Expression on this basis has become dull to those who wish to think for themselves." ~ Harry Callahan

kitchen sink / # 3676 ~ Bill Jay said it best

AMONGST MANY IDEAS IN HIS ESSAY, The Thing Itself ~ The fundamental principle of photography, there was one idea I found to be quite accurate and appropriate:

"...photographers are photographers one hundred per cent of the time, even when washing dishes."

That brilliant notion aside, Jay builds his case, re; the preeminence of the the thing itself, upon "the medium's inseparable relationship to The Thing Itself...Photography performs one function supremely well: it shows what something or somebody looked like, under a particular set of conditions at a particular moment in time". A function which he labels as "photography's boon as well as its bane.

Jay and I pretty much agree on that score. Especially the boon as well as bain part - although, iMo, emphasis should be placed on the bain part cuz ...

...when it comes to the medium's struggle to gain acceptance as an Art, its ability to faithfully record "what something or somebody looked like, under a particular set of conditions at a particular moment in time" was the primary impediment to acceptance.

That is to write, the medium's one function [that it does] supremely well created a prevailing picture making paradgm in which what you photograph is usually more important than how you photograph it. An idea which stands at odds with the Art World.

It was not until the medium began its climb out of its emphasis on the what-round about the late 60s / early 70s-that the Art World began to consider photography as a viable medium for making Art. At that time, photographers began to eschew what they had been told was a good picture and begin to make pictures of what they saw and in doing so they began to embrace tenets of the Aesthetic Movement ...

The aesthetic movement was a late nineteenth century movement that championed pure beauty and ‘art for art’s sake’ emphasising the visual and sensual qualities of art and design over practical, moral or narrative considerations.

iMo, it was as this point that the how you photograph-with emphasis on the visual and sensual qualities of art and design over narrative considerations-broke free of the constraints of the what you photographed. Photographers who were sensitive to the visual and sensual qualities of Art were free to make pictures of how they saw/see the world.

Simply put, the how began to take precedence over the what. And, the Art World took notice.

kitchen sink / intimate landscape / # 3622-23 ~ parts is just parts

(embiggenable) • µ4/3 (cuz my iPhone was upstairs in my studio)

(embiggenable) • CANON Powershot G series camera

WHILE READING A NY TIMES INTERVIEW WITH BOB DYLAN,, re; his new album Rough and Rowdy WAYS, I encountered this quote from Dylan...

It’s the combination of them that adds up to something more than their singular parts. To go too much into detail is irrelevant. The song is like a painting, you can’t see it all at once if you’re standing too close. The individual pieces are just part of a whole.

Dylan was talking about 3 names strung together in the song, I Contain Multitudes but, from my perspective, the except could very well apply to my pictures. It could also apply to the pictures made by others that I enjoy viewing. And, actually, when I think about it, that pretty much defines, in large part, what I consider to be good art, any art.

And, by extension, that also explains why I never had any desire whatsoever to acquire a picture making device which produced bleeding edge and eye sharpness...

... think about it this way - I live in a forest. When I make a picture of/in the forest-and even though the forest is filled with trees-my pictures are not about the trees, per se. My pictures are about the forest. In other words, I do not want a viewer of my pictures of the forest to miss the forest for the trees.

As Dylan said, "To go too much into detail is irrelevant."