----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, May 05, 2004 8:57
PM
Subject: RE: What sells?
Good morning, Kamran,
I hope you caught up on some rest after
yesterday.
The more I think about our meeting at city hall,
the more excited about the project I become. I think the meeting
went better than expected.
I don't have anntoinette's e-mail address.
Could you forward it to me, please? Thank you.
Marilyn
I think when we say "it's a beautiful portrait" we are reacting to
everything as a whole, i.e., the model, the lighting, the pose, the frame. If
we just think the model is cute but remain unimpressed by the presentation we
would've just said "the model is cute" instead of commenting on the portrait.
I agree with Christ that it's just not interesting when a nude
picture shows everything.
Lee
Chris <nimbo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
When
I see the portrait of a nude woman, it is mainly her figure and that she
is young and nubile. Some poses are better and lighting is important, but
it is the human (female) figure that makes it for me.
Well that's
honest!
When I capture images of a nude woman, I find the images are
a real disappointment I've never taken a "good" nude figure. Basically
I'm too distracted by the subject ... after all there are other things
you can do...
The images of nudes that I have seen hide essential
details in some way and thus make them "erotic". Seeing an electronic
strip show was interesting until all the model could do was shiver and I
lost interest and went back to my dinner.
So there it is, a nude
with the essentials (front bottom) missing is interesting but if it is
all there most of us lose interest and it don't sell.
Pictures
without human interest sell for other reasons, something to do with our
instinct to seek out other places especially to tame the wild
outdoors. Ansel Adams landscapes are wonderful and will continue to sell
well after Yellowstone park explodes (!), especially afterwards. They
seem to show an untouched wilderness with wonderful places to explore. I
suppose there is a resonance with our brains visual processor that enjoys
the shades and contrasts of the monochrome image.
And how many
waterside images get taken... millions. We humans like a waterside place
to walk by, to photograph and to camp by. Some of us will have been
conceived in a waterside setting. So that is a type of image
that sells.
Actually experience has taught me that an abstract
image where the subject is obscure creates more interest than a straight
image and in art an abstract image, where there is no obvious connection
with a real subject create the most interest.
Well there's my
penny's worth (is it a dime in the
US?).
Chris http://www.chrisspages.co.uk
-----Original
Message----- From:
owner-photoforum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:owner-photoforum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]On
Behalf Of Marilyn Sent: 03 May 2004 17:10 To: List for Photo/Imaging
Educators - Professionals - Students Subject: What sells?
I
was just reading a magazine and came across this
information.
"Everything else being equal, experts say, [art]
collectors will spend more for a portrait of an attractive young woman
than for a portrait of a man or a woman of a certain age. Horizontal
canvases appeal to buyers more than vertical ones. Landscapes with water
sell better than those without. Nudity beats modesty. And bright colors
trump paler ones. New York dealer David Nash offers another observation:
'Paintings with cows don't sell.'" (ARTnews, May 2004, "Why 15 Apples Are
Better Than 3.")
This quotation brings up a point that has bothered
me about photography for some time. When we say, "That's a beautiful
portrait," are we reacting to the model or the portrait, i.e. lighting,
posing, framing, etc,?
Marilyn
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