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Re: [OM] Ralph Gibson-seeing

Subject: Re: [OM] Ralph Gibson-seeing
From: "John A. Lind" <jlind@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Sat, 14 Jul 2001 22:42:33 +0000
At 13:28 7/10/01, John Pendley wrote:
Fred Picker used to tout this practice highly, with one twist.  He had some
kind of plastic (filter?) mounted in the slide frame.  He said it gave a
very good idea of the shades of gray that would appear in a B&W print.
Maybe somebody remembers or can find out what his gizmo was.  I can't find
my copy of The Zone VI Workshop.
JP

Ansel Adams recommended the use of a Wratten #90 viewing filter to approximate the monochromatic relationships of colors as rendered by B/W. He further recommended _no_ ND be used with it, and observes that with subjects of high color saturation its effect (utility) is reduced. Most effective use is to look through it for only a few seconds before the eye-brain has an opportunity to compensate, then to remove it and wait a few seconds before using it again . . . to keep the eye from becoming accustomed to it.

Adams also uses a frame of the same aspect ratio as the film (an empty slide frame works). As someone else has already posted, farther from the eye represents a longer lens and closer represents a shorter lens. Helps to train the eye to visualize an image sliced out of everything that's there in the environment.

Last (but not least), is "John's" approach to composition:
Painters begin with a blank canvas and _add_ image to it by applying paint from a pallette. Painting an image is therefore an "additive" task. OTOH, photography is the opposite; it is a "subtractive" process. The photographer _subtracts_ elements of reality to isolate, draw attention to, and enhance the intended subject and the desirable aspects of the subject for an image. An example is using selective focus, or DOF control to rid oneself (or at least reduce the prominence) of a cluttered background. Another method is to make the subject high key and the background low key, thereby reducing its prominence. My "abstract" TOPE was an exercise in very deliberate extreme subtraction to leave only the colors of the object to celebrate them alone, without anything else in the image to detract from them.

Just some random thoughts on it all . . .
-- John


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