It was a beautiful day yesterday. The first cool afternoon in quite a while. The kind of afternoon that some might spend riding around their lawn on a riding lawn mower, or waste by watching yet another in a never ending series of football games. I couldn't stand the idea of either of those options. And, in fact, I have never owned a lawn mower. So I grabbed one of my cameras and headed downtown to see if there was anything to photograph at the Texas Book Festival. But you know what? There really wasn't much that inspired me. But that's okay because the walk and the playful interaction with the camera was enough to satisfy me in the moment.
I parked a mile away and walked over to the event. It was held right in front of the state capitol grounds and for a few blocks to the south of the grounds, on Congress Ave. The book fare drew a good crowd on Sunday. I think a lot of people were inspired in the same way I was --- looking for a fun way to leverage the good weather.
I brought along a camera bag in defiance of my usual routine which mandates carrying only one camera and one lens. When I got ready to leave the studio yesterday morning I just couldn't decide between two lenses I'd been playing with; the Leica 35-70mm f4 ROM R series lens (a short, manual focusing zoom lens) and the fun and sparky Carl Zeiss 50mm f1.4 ZF.2 lens. Both have to be used on adapters and both are completely manual in focus and operation. I put the gear and two extra batteries and my phone in a dark green Domke canvas camera bag and carried that. I felt oddly out of balance and over provisioned.
The midday sun was bright and made all the exterior shots very contrasty. Maybe that's why there were only one or two other people there carrying cameras --- out of thousands of people in attendance.
I think we finally have to admit that photography, as we've been practicing it for decades, is all but dead to the general population. No interest. No uptake. For not the first time I felt very much an outlier to the population by which I was surrounded. It makes sense since there is no real market or venue for the kinds of photos I ended up making. At some point we're just using any public event as an excuse to show up and make photos for our own enjoyment. Nothing beyond that. Quite the sea change from 20 years ago...
The gap between fine art celebrity photographers and the main stream photographers seems to be growing as quickly as the wealth gap between billionaires and blue collar workers. Congratulations if you are making collectible work that sells. Or at least gets into juried shows and wins the approval of curators. For everyone else there's Instagram or Flickr. Good luck wading through the vast visual ocean looking for the prettiest fish.













11 comments:
>At some point we're just using any public event as an excuse to show up and make photos for our own enjoyment.
Welcome to my world and I would guess the vast majority of people who read your posts. I'm positive that there's no one in the world who is more enthralled with viewing my photos than I am. So as long as I'm satisfied with my own photos, I'll keep taking them! :D
Re your comment about taking pictures for ourselves. Since a major medical event last year that knocked the crap out of me last year I walk at a local waterfront park as often as possible. Part of my way of getting myself to keep doing it is carrying my Canon dslr every time. To my surprise several people usually women have stopped me to ask about what kind of camera they should buy as they are dissatisfied with the results from their phone. Photography was always somewhat of a niche hobby anyway so I’m getting the impression that all is not lost.
Terry
I love that hipster lean in the final black & white parking strips photo.
It's not too surprising and probably a good thing that books still exist. It would be TOO easy for some tech bro with an alternate world-view to change the contents of e-books to match their vision of things, and delete any previous editions. Thankfully, it's really difficult to paste in new pages into all those printed books. I have often wondered who safeguards the contents of all those out-of-copyright works.
Well, Fotofest is a few months away. Have not been but supposedly it is major.
At first I thought you were going to use your DLUX 8. To my mind it would be perfect for taking photos at this type of event. But I’m glad you went with your SL2-S. You created some fine photos with it. But I’m curious about whether there are any optical downsides to using your older lenses. I have used an old macro lens on film and digital cameras. It was great on film cameras — but the flat rear lens element surface can wreak havoc on images from digital cameras thanks to the back and forth reflections between the lens and the super shiny sensors. I hope you don’t have this issue with any of your old lenses.
Hi Craig, Thanks for the comment! I haven't had an issue with the 35-70mm zoom and the SL cameras. I think because the SLR lenses had to be so far away from the film plane the extra distance helps in terms of rear element reflection. The 50mm lenses have all been good as well. I did have some older zooms that were made for Contax y/c cameras that seemed to perform less well on modern, full frame mirrorless cameras. The more expensive and more recent lenses seem to have better coatings on all of the elements and I think that's the real issue; the effects of lens coatings. I would have taken the DLUX8 but I knew from previous experience that it's dark inside the big tents and if I wanted to use 1/250th of a second or higher I might need the better ISO performance of the SL2-S. It's one of that generation of "see in the dark" cameras... Thanks!
I assume you're talking about FotoFest in Houston, right? I think it's a lot of fun and of some value for fine art photographers who want portfolio reviews and also to see new work by other photographers. And there is a nice social component to the event with photo walks and impromptu happy hours. Worth it if you are close by and have the time. And it's good to support stuff like this.
Thanks Stephen. I was channeling my inner Gen Z.
I hadn't thought of the possibility of revisionist history by evil forces but you make a very good point!!! Wouldn't surprise me if the TX governor made Ayn Rand's books required texts for state colleges...
Even though it's different than before I still love, enjoy, am happy to be out with a camera making photographs. Beats sitting around watching TV or scrolling through camera reviews on YouTube. Glad you are happy too. Stay well.
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