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Thread: Alec Soth on 8x10

  1. #1
    tim atherton's Avatar
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    Alec Soth on 8x10

    especially the third video:

    http://photo-muse.blogspot.com/2007/...-on-video.html

    He gets one of the major points I use 8x10 and much prefer it to 4x5 - how the picture looks on the ground glass - that it's like looking at a small, perfect painting and that in a way, actually taking the picture is secondary.
    You'd be amazed how small the demand is for pictures of trees... - Fred Astaire to Audrey Hepburn

    www.photo-muse.blogspot.com blog

  2. #2

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    Re: Alec Soth on 8x10

    I agree and don't agree.

    I do love the "movie" feeling of the large ground glass; I feel like I'm in my own camera obscura, my own world, as Soth says. (BTW you can occasionally get the feeling with a 4x5; I had it with my 1913 Graflex RB, my face comfortable nuzzled against the velvet lined hood, everything else fully blacked out but the almost ghostly image moving on the glass.) I also agree that a lot of the time portaits with smaller cameras are hard because the person doesn't know who to interact with more, you or the camera. Larger cameras definitely create a remove that allows a person to confess directly to the lens; in many situations minimizing one's own presence can really help.

    I also agree that the photographs measure the distance between photographer and subject perhaps more than the subject itself, but ultimately I find many contemporary photographers too complacent about this distance. I feel it becomes a way to be safe, not to engage; it's too comfortable.

    I should emphasize that I don't mind distance per se. I think, for example, that Walker Evans was a master at photographing both the social and class distance he felt from his subjects, which was huge, and at the same time the very personal sense of shock he felt at how they lived, which was overwhelming. That is why pictures such as the series for "Let Us Now Praise Famous Men" are at once almost icy in their gaze (Kirstein called it a "puritanical stare"), and at the same time so immediate and piercing for me. For being so far away and close at the same time, they are very honest pictures.

    On the other hand much contemporary work that holds this distance doesn't elaborate on what that distance means for them. I feel like asking, "OK, so you feel removed, but what do feel about being removed?" I don't sense anything particular about it, be it dismay or nostalgia or desire or whatever; I'm not hearing the photographer's voice. There is little contact, or transgression, or crossing boundaries. The pictures are good, but somehow often not dynamic enough for me. Distance as a kind of objectivity doesn't bother me, but distance as neutrality does.

  3. #3

    Re: Alec Soth on 8x10

    that camera dosen't look to cumbersome, what is it?

  4. #4
    tim atherton's Avatar
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    Re: Alec Soth on 8x10

    Phillips Compact II
    You'd be amazed how small the demand is for pictures of trees... - Fred Astaire to Audrey Hepburn

    www.photo-muse.blogspot.com blog

  5. #5

    Re: Alec Soth on 8x10

    still, it's the hoders that are gonna kill you i suppose...

  6. #6
    tim atherton's Avatar
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    Re: Alec Soth on 8x10

    not if you have managed to doggedly track down (in Spain funnily enough...) plenty of the - admitedly rather fussy - Mido holders

    (even better if they really do start getting made again...)

    With the Compact II I can easily carry 12 or so holders and three or four lenses + bits and pieces in a bike courier shoulder bag or small backpack and the camera sits on the tripod over the other shoulder
    You'd be amazed how small the demand is for pictures of trees... - Fred Astaire to Audrey Hepburn

    www.photo-muse.blogspot.com blog

  7. #7

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    Re: Alec Soth on 8x10

    Tim,

    Thanks for the video links...great!

  8. #8

    Re: Alec Soth on 8x10

    so... the only thing left is to import film and pay for processing!

    still... maybe one day... even managed to sell a few pictures this year!

  9. #9

    Re: Alec Soth on 8x10

    Reminds me a little of Craig McDean, who also shoots lots of 8x10, except mostly for fashion and lifestyle photography. One comment of his in Picture magazine was that he liked shooting 8x10 because it gave him the best preview of magazine full page size. He also shoots 4x5 and sometimes an RZ67.

    Ciao!

    Gordon Moat
    A G Studio

  10. #10
    Vaughn's Avatar
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    Re: Alec Soth on 8x10

    Quote Originally Posted by tim atherton View Post
    He gets one of the major points I use 8x10 and much prefer it to 4x5 - how the picture looks on the ground glass - that it's like looking at a small, perfect painting and that in a way, actually taking the picture is secondary.

    Using a 4x5 or 5x7 is like reading a paperback. An 8x10 is reading the first edition hardcover edition. An 11x14+ is the coffeetable book.

    Vaughn

    PS...that said, since I am so near-sighted, that a 4x5 without my glasses and a 6" focusing distance to the GG is pretty nice.

    Also, I have hung out under the darkcloth in busy areas of Yosemite Valley just enjoying the off-the-wall comments of the tourists passing by!

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