Cover Story

Is analog photography dead?
Contact Photography Festival

Digital technologies are taking over in the photography world, but some analog users fear we’ll lose the happy accidents that come with film

Is analog photography a dying art? Film, like vinyl, is now a highly touted remnant of a disappearing era. As digital photography, with its instantaneous feedback and transmitability, supersedes the more arcane processes of the darkroom and lab, the chemical film industry has struggled to adjust. Kodak Canada shut its 100-year-old 18-building facility in 2005, consigning an entire era of film technology to the ash heap of history.

The effect is being felt across North America. Markets for film stock and cameras are dwindling, sparking panic among devotees.

Photography historian and curator Stephen Bulger of the Stephen Bulger Gallery, whose show The Death Of Photography (about, among other things, the closure of the Kodak plant) ran through February 2, ima-gines most film stocks being exhausted in about 15 years.

“That’s just a guess based on when Spielberg and Hollywood cross over from shooting film to shooting digital,” he says. “Once the demand from the film industry drops off, I think it will be more difficult to make film just for photographers.”

Cheryl Sourkes, whose show at Peak Gallery through May 24 consists of images captured without a camera, agrees.

“By the time the next decade is over, traditional photography will be considered a vintage process,” she says. Sourkes opts to reproduce webcam images from the Internet. “I love the quality of what you call old-fashioned photography, but new technology seems to possess an irresistible allure.”

Toni Hafkenscheid, who shot the works on display at Birch Libralato with analog toy cameras, gives analog about a decade. “I have no doubt that most film will be gone in 10 years. The whole photographic process is moving from a very tactile experience to looking at the computer screen.”

Some people believe that the shift from analog to digital represents a battle for photography’s soul. There’s something in the new medium of instantaneous electronic image-making that robs photography of its hands-on authenticity, they say. Some even argue that digital images, so easily airbrushed and modified, are less real and immediate than film.

“I don’t think digital looks very authentic,” says Bulger. “I’m more fascinated with the way light is transferred to film. Digital to me is a mathematical formulation of that, and in that way it’s one step removed from photography. With film, there is still the possibility of accidents… of something spontaneous happening. I generally think it’s a more beautiful medium all around.”

Unpredictability is one of the joys of film.

“Using my toy cameras makes it exciting,” says Hafkenscheid. “When I look at the contact sheet a week after the shoot, it’s like Christmas. Everything is a surprise, whether good or bad.”

He doesn’t believe, however, that digital greatly affects the authenticity of the photographic image. “Photographers make all kinds of decisions before pushing the button. Most photographers just want to get a great image, and will do anything to get it [cropping, angle of view, light, etc]. Enhancing, altering things in Photoshop is just an extra step in creating that great image,” Hafkenscheid argues.

For Sourkes, however, distancing herself from her subjects via digital technology is what drives her work. “It’s a second order type of thing.” She explains, “I document what webcam owners consider worthy of attention, and I do it from a distance. It’s like combing an archive as it’s coming into formation, an Alice In Wonderland kind of archive.”

The Last Photograph, a new show by Brazilian artist Rosângela Rennó at Prefix Institute of Contemporary Art, features the analog prints of 43 South American photographers placed next to the cameras that shot them. She sees the paradigm shift from analog to digital in a more theoretical light.

“Our faith in the photograph used to be rooted in the almost magical, secretive and slow way the image was chemically produced. Today, this faith is supported by the speed, ease and availability of images. Because of this, we make many more images than we necessarily need or are ready to absorb.”

Rennó envisions an artisanal photography movement similar to other movements that retained old technologies.

“We’ll still have film for a long time, like we still have pendulum clocks, LP record players and people doing goatskin leather bookbinding, making blown glass and Super 8 films.

In the meantime, the explosion of digital image-making technology has widened the democratization of the photographic process.

“Digital technology is the great equalizer,” says Armando Lulu, a local photographer who also runs his own graphic design studio, M 2020.

“I don’t think I’d be a professional photographer now if it weren’t for digital. I remember when photographers were this intimidating elite group of technicians fiddling with all their high-tech gear. Digital cameras changed all that. Four years ago, I didn’t even know what an F-stop was. Now I’ve opened up a commercial photography wing to my design business and do shoots professionally.”

It’s not only the ease of digital’s instant point-and-shoot feedback that helped Lulu along, but also the burgeoning online forums and DIY philosophy that supports them.

“The Flickr community helped me tremendously, and I learned everything I know about jerry-rigged professional studio lighting – including how to get professional lighting effects using lamps and a bungee cord – from Strobist.com.”

NOW | May 1-8, 2008 | VOL 27 NO 35
Copyright 2009 NOW Communications
Comments
Posted by Dan on 05/02/2008, 04:55 PM
Marginalizes the state of photography today in to a debate between extreme futurists and archaists. Hafkenscheid's series is ironically similar to a Canadian Club ad ran in the same issue that also "toys" with ideas of family, authenticity, etc, but probably more effectively and for the purpose of selling whiskey. Both his and Sourkes' work actually stray as far from authenticity as possible by emulating and reusing the style and images of others. Also, "strobes.com" doesn't exist, he was referring to "strobist.com".

Posted by Yousuf on 05/03/2008, 09:59 AM
This is cover story-worthy?

Posted by Miriam on 05/03/2008, 11:49 AM
No, it isn't, Yousuf. The real story is how decision-making by Kodak, once such an overwhelming presence in the film imaging market, made company moves that distinguished its existing merchandise offerings as perfectly unspectacular in any way compared to what one can buy in the film market (Fuji, Ilford, even Shanghai/Lucky) or in the digital market (digital cameras, printers, etc.). The big story is how a slew of management and strategic missteps by a major player in the film imaging world validated a fait accompli position for so many voices to rise up and say in sunk-cost theory form, "Film is dying." But film isn't dying.

Posted by Adam on 05/04/2008, 10:44 AM
My favorite quote: "I don't think I'd be a professional photographer now if it weren't for digital. I remember when photographers were this intimidating elite group of technicians fiddling with all their high-tech gear. Digital cameras changed all that. Four years ago, I didn't even know what an F-stop was."

So, the interpretation is that digital technology has dumbed-down photography? With its histograms, digi-noise-on-demand, and vibrating sensors, it is somehow less complicated? Do film cameras not have f-stops?

And before you toss the last shovel of dirt on film because Kodak is getting smaller, check out Ilford.

Posted by Alisha on 08/02/2008, 09:22 PM
I don't think film is going to die. The consumer want and need of film is going down yes, but I still believe film will be around for years to come just like vinyl. Those who are true to traditional photography will keep film a live.

I have to say digital did get me into photography though, but I've stopped shooting with it because I just like film. I thought it was quite funny though when someone stated film has "high-tech gear."

I'm only 17 and have barely gotten into analog photography a couple months a go, but it just goes to show that film isn't dead.

Posted by Frank on 09/23/2008, 04:30 PM
No we are not dead, but parts of us are dying, we're losing films as the market shrinks. Kodacrome is hanging on by a tread as i write. It's the serious amateurs that are keeping film alive at this stage. Most professionals have switched or more accurately in some cases, been forced to switch at this stage. We need new blood by way of young people to become interested in analog if we are going to survive in any real meaningful sence. Another danger is the lack of analog cameras coming onto the scene (though i am been given to understand this is at least partly down to so many analog cameras been dumped by people going digital). Film needs to be fed to camras at the end of the day. Sorry if my comments seem to be about markets, but i feel that is where the heart of the matter lies.

Posted by paul on 10/05/2008, 04:37 PM
if film dies , then photography dies along with it. headline ...... digital killed the film star

Posted by carlino on 11/06/2008, 04:10 AM
Well, I've used extensively film photography for more than 30 years and had had around 15 cameras, mostly Canon, Nikon, Zenit and Leica. I still have some of them. The darkroom is still a magic place for me and taking B&W pictures has been a real pleasure for me. I've also got a couple of excellent digital cameras, but I take too many pictures with them!. For professional purposes I use film. For fun I use digital. Analog makes much better pictures and that's no secret for long time photographers. But I will keep both kinds of cameras. They represent two different worlds and don't want to miss any of them.

Posted by ED on 11/15/2008, 05:15 PM
Like Alisha, I got into photography through digital - and now use film exclusively and print in the darkroom. (Having said that, I'm not a professional so it doesn't matter.)

Why? Digital's ok, but film looks a lot better. I also stare at a computer screen all day long - why would I want to do that in my spare time? Photoshop's ok, but darkroom printing is a lot more absorbing.

But film is probably doomed - except as some hugely expensive, artisan thing. As the world goes more and more online, people will find it harder to understand why you would want to use film anyway. And the camera companies have a vested interest in selling you a digital camera, then making sure you buy the upgraded one two years later, then making sure you buy the upgraded one...

This is sad. First because the experience of using film is utterly different from the experience of using digital, and (for me) because it's much more satisfying. And second? The last time I was in the darkroom, there was a guy there priting from 40-year-old negatives. Think you'll be able to read your digital files in 40 years' time?

Posted by indianavince on 01/22/2009, 03:55 PM
I found one place film can still be handy; once was a time I took my camera's and film inside to spare it from the summer heat in the car. Now I leave the digital gear in the car most of the time. Today I shot some architecture and found my Leaf Aptus too cold to "boot" after sitting in the car all night. Yes the D700 worked fine, but I thought film and a Hasselblad never let me down in the cold.

--I make better black and white "silver prints" than I make digital prints... or perhaps I am just not a good digital printer. I just don't find sitting at the computer engaging.

That is all..

Posted by Jeff Kubach on 05/30/2009, 02:43 PM
Digital might be big now, but analog is better.

Posted by ricardo on 07/24/2009, 02:03 PM
the day which digital paper looks as silver paper....THAT day I will switch to digital ...still theres something I dont like from digital paper ... its dull.

Posted by Ricardo Insua on 07/24/2009, 02:08 PM
I run out of film...... now i run out of batteries , and faster than film , i lost the pictures of my wedding thanks to three digital cameras we took , the first ...out of batteries .. the second one, from my brother ... broken ... the third one from my sister in law.....she forgot the batteries . and I left my Contaflex in the car , zeiss ikon ....cause they convinced me that my camera has no flash .....

Posted by Ricardo Insua on 07/24/2009, 02:13 PM
the day in which chemical paper looks better than digital paper , THAT day i will switch to digital photo , considering that I have digital cameras , i am not stupid , if i see an advantage i will go for it , do the math , digital paper... plus batteries , MUCH more expensive than a simple roll that you now have to wait one week ...like in the seventies ...again ....have to wait for a week again ....

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