So This Is Progress?
April 3, 2008
We love to tell ourselves that the human race is making progress. This notion infests our discussions of technology, culture, religion, politics, human relations, and most anything that human beings find interesting. Indeed, we are so immersed in the sea of alleged progress that minor counter-revolutions have sprung up to decry everything from global trade to the loss of the “traditional” family farm / hardware store / vegetable stand / school system, ad infinitum.
But a lot of what gets peddled as “progress” isn’t. And it gets successfully peddled as such precisely because too few people have the necessary baseline knowledge to assess whether the new really is an improvement on the old. If you don’t understand something of Bach, then Rap will constitute music. If you’ve never seen Peter O’Toole in Becket, than Sean Penn is going to seem like the a fine actor. The yowlings of most current female R & B artists seem impressive until you hear Kiri Te Kanawa sing Gershwin. This isn’t just a matter of taste. Quality has some objective standards no matter how hard they are to discern. The broader point is that “progress” implies improvement compared to some former thing or state. If you do not understand the former, you cannot judge how progressive the latter.
I recently had a (literally) vivid reminder of this. For some thirty years I’ve been a serious black and white photographer, working with traditional silver materials in a wet (chemical) darkroom. On a whim, I recently bought a reasonably high-end “prosumer” grade digital Single Lens Reflex (DSLR). This is a state-of-the art 10 megapixel camera with every bell and whistle a serious photographer could want, manufactured by one of the two dominant names in professional photography.
Moreover, I have an embarrassment of software riches with at least four different photo editors at my disposal, all running on a nice high-performance computer with a large screen, lots of memory, blah, blah, blah. (I even actually know how to use some useful part of each of these programs, a not inconsiderable accomplishment.)
So … off on holidays I went, shiny new toy in hand. I took more pictures in a week than I’d taken in the past year, simply because of the ease and facility of the new DSLR. I didn’t do this thoughtlessly though. Thirty years of making serious pictures teaches you a discipline of shooting that emphasizes economy and deliberation as you work. I translated this discipline into the new digital world and was, at least at first blush, pretty happy with what came home on film, er, I mean, memory card.
When I got the images into the computer, I began the process of gentle corrections. Again, the many years have taught me that fine photographs respond to small, subtle improvement, not being beat over the head with a CPU. But I noticed a curious thing. Notwithstanding the almost unlimited control over the image the computer affords me, I simply could not come close to the final picture quality I’ve come to regard as “normal”.
The reason is pretty simple. I ordinarily shoot with a couple film cameras that produce negatives 6cm x 6cm or 4″ x 5″ respectively. The amount of “information” that a piece of analog film in these sizes can hold (dynamic range, tonality, resolution, detail) far exceeds anything in the digital world until you get into the $40,000 stratosphere of pro gear. (Even there, I doubt that a Hasselblad H3D can touch a properly exposed 4×5 negative.) To turn a phrase from the custom car builders, “There ain’t no substitute for square inches.” My $1200 state-of-the art DSLR – a magnificently engineered and very well thought out tool – can’t produce images as objectively good as an old $100 used pro camera I bought on eBay recently. The “information space” of the two respective instruments is that different.
So … is the new camera “progress”. Well, maybe, at least in some dimensions. In looking at the results of the past several weeks, the camera seems to produce images that are comparable to a well engineered 35mm camera of yesteryear. I long ago abandoned 35mm for anything but amusement’s sake exactly because it could not hold the tonal fidelity and detail of the larger film negatives. But, small, easy to use cameras have a place in photojournalism, street shooting, sports, and casual hobby shooting. In these contexts, the new DSLR is a hands down improvement over its film brethren. A 10 megapixel image is, as I said, comparable to a decent 35mm negative, and the ability to easily manipulate it in the computer is orders-of-magnitude easier than doing it in the darkroom.
But I seek quality. I strive to make prints that are breathtaking (to me at least). By that measure the DSLR is a giant step backwards. As sophisticated as the light meter, auto focus, and optics are, they cannot compensate for the sheer lack of information captured on the CCD, at least by comparison to a well executed analog film negative. For the same reason that synthesizers and samplers did not replace Steinway pianos, digital photography – at least for the forseeable future – is not going to replace the traditional high end silver print. I can make that judgment because I know what was and thus can judge what is.
It’s tempting to dismiss all this as just an artifact of age: I’ve lived long enough now to have some context from then and now. But its deeper than mere age. It has to do with how we’re educated. It has to do with our culture. In the evolution of Western civilization, it became clear at some point that knowing “what was” was fundamentally important in the education of young minds. That’s why educational institutions came to teach liberal arts: History, Philosophy, Geography, Literature and all the rest were put in place to give the young student a crash course in context – so they’d know enough to develop a sense of what was bull and what was cow patties. But our educational system is in tatters. It has been polluted by politicians, cause monkeys, ideologues of all stripes, and people seeking to avoid real work.
The consequences are horrific, not the least of which is that everything is now “Unique”, “Awesome”, and “Real Progress” (Dude!). It’s why young adults can fill a 160 MB iPod and never have heard the Mozart Jupiter symphony. It’s why a good many people under 30 know all about Flickr but have never seen the ageless beauty of Rembrandt. It’s why people run in droves to the social networking web sites, sharing some of the most intimate details of their lives (and some of the most mundane) but cannot write a compelling personal letter as simple as a thank-you note. This is not about technology. It is about institutionalized ignorance. It is about the academy, parents, and the society at-large having totally failed our young because it was easier to give them what they wanted than what they needed.
Real progress springs from rich, fertile minds harnessed with the disciplines of learning, informed with a large base of knowledge, and animated with a passion for excellence. Real progress is dying. It is being replaced not by just the vulgar, but by the trite, the mundane, the uninteresting, the uninspired, the insipid, and the just plain stupid. Western culture gave us The Renaissance, The Reformation, and The Enlightenment. These three events conspired to give us Liberty. Our insipid stupidity will lead us back into a new Dark Ages and a new slavery. To be sure, it will be a digital Dark Age with lousy music, incoherent poetry, no real literature and … blurry pictures.
April 4, 2008 at 12:36 am
I could not agree more wholeheartedly. You have accurately stated what I have felt for some tome now. I am mostly ignorant on the subject of film photography but I am not ignorant of quality musicianship. I rarely enjoy any music that is on the current “top forty” music stations. There is still some great music being made today but it is just not popular. Society is seeking instant info/gratification/everything but it is in dire need of historical context. As a parent of a teenager I find mysely fighting for her attention so I can teach her context.
April 4, 2008 at 9:05 am
Much truth in what you write. I gave up my darkroom when I developed allergies to some of the chemicals – but I miss the control that it gave. I traded my 35mm SLR for a 6MP digital camera as a concession to arthritis in my hands, but it’s not as versatile – no bounce flash, can’t load Tri-X and process for 800 speed.
However, there are a few rays of hope among the younger generations. My just-turned-six granddaughter knows how to write a thank you note (something she learned from her mother). And she will be exposed to a variety of music when she starts piano lessons next year.
April 4, 2008 at 2:26 pm
I’m afraid I mostly disagree with you, especially the conclusion.
First of all, you’re making an unfair comparison: View camera vs. SLR (digital OR film!) just isn’t a reasonable battle. DSLR is doing a very good job of replacing film SLR, because it has comparable or better abilities. Neither of them are view cameras, or even medium format. You say, “Even there, I doubt that a Hasselblad H3D can touch a properly exposed 4×5 negative.” Neither can an H2F–how is that the fault of digital photography?
I’ll grant that digital hasn’t become feasible for most large format users yet, but that’s OK–you can keep using your large format gear with film, and in a few years you’ll be able to buy a 50 Megapixel digital back for a relatively sane price.
As far as the digital vs. chemical darkroom, you make another flaw: You say, “I know what was and thus can judge what is.” Not until you actually KNOW what is, can you judge it! Seems simple, but you’ve spent 30 years with your hands in the developer and fixer baths, dodging and burning in negatives in the enlarger, and now you’re feeling frustrated with a COMPLETELY NEW AND DIFFERENT toolset–the computer. What a surprise! Spend five years doing digital editing, and THEN tell us whether or not it’s as capable as a traditional darkroom.
(As an aside, digital also offers possibilities which are physically impossible in a chemical darkroom, so even if there _are_ some weaknesses, there are also brand new options which have never before been explored in the history of photography.)
Is digital perfect and wonderful? Of course not–it has its wrinkles and warts, just like film does. (Similar is the comparison between CDs and records, incidentally.) The key to being a great photographer is to work with and struggle against those limitations to further your art–and if you dismiss a field, then you’re either defining your realm of expertise, or you’re limiting yourself. (Consider Ansel Adams and his love/hate relationship with colour as a perfect old-school example.)
In a broader sense, you’re exactly right about some things: “This is not about technology. It is about institutionalized ignorance.” To a greater or lesser degree though, that has been the case for a century or more. Society, i.e. politicians and corporations, have always benefited from an ignorant populace, and do what they can to dull the masses. Parents have generally been the barrier between this and their kids, but I would say that after WWII, this role was lost or heavily diluted. “The government/companies know best” mentality sprung up and stayed dominant for a few generations and led to what we have now, but is now crumbling. Speaking generally, the baby-boomers grew up with a sense of inherent privilege. Two generations later, “Gen-X” (the slacker generation) grew up with a distrust of everything, followed closely by Gen-Y, who are realising that they have no one to rely on or even trust other than themselves to fix the mess, and that’s what they’re doing. Young-ish parents are looking at how much fun they had playing at ‘dangerous’ things as kids, and encouraging their children to behave like kids instead of china dolls with daytimers. Mark my words: The current generation of 15-25 year olds is going to do more to fix the western world than anyone that preceded them (in peacetime) in the 20th century.
“Real progress is dying. It is being replaced not by just the vulgar, but by the trite, the mundane, the uninteresting, the uninspired, the insipid, and the just plain stupid.”
At the risk of sounding vulgar, trite, etc., I say bollocks! Progress is not getting headlines. Progress is not being reported by the attention-deficit laden media. That doesn’t mean that progress is dying. Great art is still being created, some of it on the computer and some of it with palladium-process chemistry or hand-mixed oils. Great music is still being created, some on traditional instruments (I’ve got a great album here from ~1997 of a woman who plays original music on the hurdy gurdy), some on modern instruments, and some on the computer! I could go on (movies, operas, poetry, prose) but it’s all very simple: Talent and drive create art with tools available, and as the tools change, so does the general form of the art.
Is there crap out there? Absolutely, possibly more than ever before. However, there’s probably more GOOD stuff than ever before as well. Learning to differentiate is something that not everyone has accomplished, and not everyone will. Quite simply, it doesn’t matter how much garbage is spewed forth–cultural progress is a measure of the positive, not the ratio between positive and negative.
April 4, 2008 at 2:56 pm
Colin-
There’s certainly something to what you say, particularly, “cultural progress is a measure of the positive, not the ratio between positive and negative.”
It is also almost certain that the trite and the vulgar get more airtime now than ever before because of the ease of access new media provides.
But … I am less sanguine than you about the Gen Yers. I work with some of them. I’ve managed some of them. They (unlike the Gen X crowd) are NOT lazy, shiftless, or stupid. But they are very poorly educated and even more poorly equipped to make the judgments needed to drive the culture forward. I’m not talking about the relative lack of experience people of that age would normally have. I’m talking about baseline knowledge that a person in the 20s and
30s should already possess. They are getting a very slow start – in large part because – as you noted – the government has become a substitute for parents.
As a group, they have almost no cultural “memory”. They tend to have difficulty focusing on one thing for extended periods of time. They are obsessed with technology as a vehicle for social interaction but often have poor or at least diminished personal interaction skills. When I look at them, I see “deer in the headlights” fear – a fear that comes from their internal awareness that their elders let them down and they really aren’t ready to even begin running the world.
Finally, let me clarify – I am in no way frustrated by the new digital photographic technology. My real profession is that as a computer scientist and engineer and I’m thus quite comfortable with the technology. My observation was merely that a $1200
state-of-the art DSLR can’t do what a $100 Mamiya C-3 does with 40 year old optics, let alone a Hasselblad.
I say all this only to note that my real discovery is that digital at this price point is merely replacing 35mm at best. Given the limited market for medium format, and the even more limited market for large format, I don’t see digital making much of dent there any time soon.
April 4, 2008 at 8:35 pm
Wow, so much to say. Well I can’t agree with some of the commentators, because I am a Generation X-er and I am not at all as you describe — just so we’re clear.
I noticed that you brought up many arts but not dancing. Dance is certainly an important art that has deteriorated. Not long ago, I caught a program on PBS comparing the styles of Gene Kelly to Fred Astaire. What those guys did was really astounding. They really took dancing to a new level; it was a golden age. But today good dancing is considered lining up in a formation with a little microphone strapped to your head. It’s absolutely terrible. And the public doesn’t learn how to dance anymore either. No lessons, no moves, just shimmy. That’s my two cents in any case.
April 4, 2008 at 9:40 pm
Fair enough, but it’s not like we stand around admiring the beauty of cave paintings either. Is this progress? Eventually. Some people may have found it in poor taste nobody was reading Bibles anymore after the printing press was invented. And maybe you might find it sad that digital photography isn’t quite up to your standards yet, but given time it will surpass them. Perhaps even some day film will be comparable to cave paintings. This is evolution. The old dies and the new rises up.
April 4, 2008 at 10:49 pm
I know nothing of photography, but I agree with your social commentary entirely. I too am a Gen-Xer, and am seriously considering the homeschool option and the homeschool community for my kids for exactly the reasons you’ve stated above. Not every young person is this way, to be sure, but there’s definitely a significant downhill trend. I want my kids to be deep, knowledgeable, reflective and sharp critical thinkers, and I don’t at all believe they’ll acquire these skills in the public school system. I also don’t believe they’ll gain an appreciation for these skills, nor the desire to learn them, through pop culture or the media. I could say more about this, but it’s too late. At any rate, thanks so much for this insightful post!
April 5, 2008 at 2:36 am
*I agree with you. I have wrote about how Zone A and Zone B is a requirement for true Photography. Digital Art lacks Zone A. A positive print comes from a negative film. Digital Photography is here to stay. Most Digital Photo Artist lack the training or experience to produce quality images. Todays software makes it easier, if you can afford the latest gadgets you can create some of the most stunning Photo Art.
* I refuse to change over to Digital Photography, it will dull my senses needed to create and develop my Photo Art the Classic way.
*I specialize in Hand Tinting Black and White Photos the “Classic way”. I use my own 2 Zone Technique to create my Photo Art.Never computer aided in any way.
* I can produce works of Art from any old and forgotten Black and White or Color negative. I have over 50,000 Color Negatives
with Color Photos that I am currently converting into Black and White Photo Art. My Photo Art is original and signed. I have been in the field over 26 years
April 5, 2008 at 12:33 pm
Nice post, and with a lot of truth in it. I don’t know about photography particularly but its certainly true that in this society there is a lack of questioning about new trends.
I’m from Britain (Scotland) originally before I emigrated to the US, and your post reminds me of things I’d read a lot in Britain. The UK is full of older people decrying the negative aspects of cultural change in well written opinion pieces. But unlike America, in the UK these people are listened to. In Britain people are very concerned about holding onto their tradition and culture, new changes are not adopted as enthusiastically as they are here. And incidentally when you say Western you mean American, you guys aren’t the entire modern world much as you like to think so, and everything from your language to the examples you use make this very apparent to anyone with an international perspective.
However I’d disagree with you about the negative impact this will have on the USA, I think its the cornerstone of the American identity. Its pretty obvious to me from reading history that America has always been this way, optimism, enthusiasm about the future and a willingness to adopt change are America, its the only thing that can explain the massive and regular cultural changes this country has undergone. At the most basic level changing your countries ethnic makeup at regular intervals is the best example of this. And you are right, it does lead to poor national decisions, but it always has. The best current example is the Iraq war. this is the 3rd time in 100 years (Philippines, Vietnam and Iraq) that America has tried to impose their idea of civilization on a poor backward and violent country. With exactly the same results each time. And you know what? in a generation or 2 I’m sure you’ll do exactly the same thing again. and you know what? its why I like it here.
Apologies for not being as well written as your original post. but then I am a “lazy shiftless and stupid” gen X’er.
April 5, 2008 at 1:07 pm
equaltojake -
It’s one thing to embrace change, it’s quite another to embrace it *blindly* with little- or no understanding whether the change is for the better. Decision making and analysis requires context, and context is exactly what is absent in large amounts these days.
Take for example your contention:
This is the 3rd time in 100 years (Philippines, Vietnam and Iraq) that America has tried to impose their idea of civilization on a poor backward and violent country.
It simply isn’t so – or at least not as you’ve stated.
America had no intention of “imposing [it's] idea of civilization” in, say Viet Nam. That war was fought on the argument that it was necessary to thwart the spread of Communism. You can argue that it was a bad decision, but (because you lack the necessary historical context) the claim it was about cultural imperialism is just flatly wrong. Ditto the Iraq war which (whether you agree or not) was sold on the basis as being necessary to thwart Islamic terrorism, not because it was the intent to put up Burger Kings in the desert.
I am quite clear, BTW, on the distinction between “Western” and “Amercian”, and I use the broader category intentionally. This disease of lack of context, poor education, short attention span, and all the rest is as bad- or worse in Europe as it is in the U.S. Europeans love to tell themselves this is not so and smile condescendingly at their American cousins but I see no evidence that it is particularly better in the UK or on the Continent. I say this having lived in Europe as a child (English was my second written and read language) and having been back many times since on business and pleasure. This is a disease of the West, not just of the US.
April 6, 2008 at 1:32 am
heracletus Says:
April 4, 2008 at 2:56 pm
> My observation was merely that a $1200 state-of-the
> art DSLR can’t do what a $100 Mamiya C-3 does with 40 year old
> optics, let alone a Hasselblad.
I don’t know of anyone who would disagree. But then Mamiya and Hasselblad are not ” “prosumer” grade
To match that quality in digital you need to spend about 10x as much, but if you do you will rival and in a lot of cases beat medium (6×6) format film
> I say all this only to note that my
> real discovery is that digital at this price point is merely
> replacing 35mm at best.
in reality digital has taken a very large section (maybe even the majority) of the 35mm market
> Given the limited market for medium format,
> and the even more limited market for large format, I don’t see
> digital making much of dent there any time soon.
AFIK in the medium format Pro market digital is becoming much more common because even though it is much more expensive initally, the time savings make it cheaper or more appropriate in many cases.
Pacco J Pompei. Says:
April 5, 2008 at 2:36 am
> Most Digital Photo Artist lack the training or experience to produce
> quality images.
If that is indeed true and your comment under is also true then qed. quality images are not important!!
> if you can afford the latest gadgets you can create
> some of the most stunning Photo Art.
However IMHO stunning Photo Art still requires an artist, their work may be easier with computers but computers can not replace the artist yet.