Monday, February 27, 2012

The Anti-Revolution Photography Revolution


This shot was taken with a Vivitar V3800N 35mm SLR body through a Pentax 135mm f2.8 lens set at f4 and 1/500, using Kodak Portra 400 film. Everything, including the film and processing didn’t exceed $200. To take a digital picture this good would require a state of the art full frame or high resolution ASP-C sensor DSLR costing $2000 or more.

One of the beautiful things about old fashioned film photography is that professional and amateur photographers both worked at their craft on a fairly level playing field. Professionals generally bought better, more expensive equipment to stand up to the rigors of daily use and abuse but the equipment that amateurs usually bought was just as capable of producing excellent pictures. Some professional equipment like high end and/or multiple flash units used with the old film cameras certainly enhanced the pro’s ability and made his job easier but the point I am trying to get to is that with film photography it was primarily the skill and knowledge of the photographer that made the difference in the quality of the pictures, not the cost and sophistication of the equipment.

Today that is no longer the case. While there is still something to be said for having the ability to compose a picture properly, anyone with enough money can buy a full featured, full frame or medium format digital camera and take excellent pictures out of the box with the auto-focus and on board light metering system and computer doing all the “heavy lifting.” Beyond that, they can further “enhance” their pictures with all kinds of sophisticated post-processing software. 

Those of us who cannot or will not shell out the thousands of dollars needed to buy these professional quality cameras, computers and post-processing programs must be content with nice cameras taking “good” pictures with smaller sensors and less sophisticated features. 

Now I don’t mean to minimize the capabilities of modern cameras using ASP-C or Micro Four Thirds or those with even smaller sensors. These cameras are certainly not cheap either. Still, there’s no comparison between the picture quality produced by these amateur cameras and their “big brother” professional counterparts.

As a result I believe we are in the midst of an anti-revolution, revolution. A remarkable number of potential amateur photographers are realizing that since they only look at photographs on their phones, tablets or computer screens anyway the cameras in their cell phones take photographs that look just as good as their digital cameras. Plus with the dizzying array of apps available for cameras phones it is literally possible to have more features on your camera phone than on your digital camera. Instagram and Hipstamatic for the iphone; and Lightbox and Magic Hour for android are just a couple of the many popular apps that promise to turn your camera phone into a high end digital camera. 

From my observations it seems like there are many more people trying to imitate the Holga look and vintage black & white than there are trying to achieve the “high end DSLR look.”  The fact that the Holga itself is achieving record sales along with other toy cameras is more evidence that there is an anti-revolution going on that rebels against the high tech slick digital camera revolution that started a few years ago.

Of course there are lot of really bad pictures being taken and exhibited as “vintage” or “artistic” too. Light leaks (real or simulated) , double exposures, poorly focused shots and pictures displaying other examples of liberties taken with age old guidelines for composition do not in and of themselves qualify as “art.” That said, true creativity recognizes no bounds and today’s camera phone is a big improvement over the box camera and Instamatic of yesteryear. I have a pretty good one and use it frequently but I’m not giving up my 35mm or my Holga either.



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