Re: list trouble ?? (who is Valerie, where is she?)

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From: Steve Shapiro (sgshiya@redshift.com)
Date: 09/27/00-11:20:24 PM Z


----- Original Message -----
From: "Judy Seigel" <jseigel@panix.com>
To: <alt-photo-process-l@skyway.usask.ca>
Sent: Wednesday, September 27, 2000 11:04 AM
Subject: list trouble ?? (who is Valerie, where is she?)

>
> I received this message from a list friend, and pass it along in case
> there's an answer out there. I myself have been getting 4 or 5 list
> e-mails a day (less than satisfactory comments about what makes
> photography art, but that's not this problem).
>
> Judy
>
> ===========================================
>
> ... is the alt-photo list gone?
>
> I had not seen any traffic for quite a while, sent a test message to the
> list, and it was returned to me saying that 'there is no Valerie Matthews
at
> Teradyne.'
>
> ============================
>
> Any ideas?
>
The Renaissance art masters gathered together in the Garden of Scholars and
determied that 'fine' art was that which was to determind the finite
expression, medium to caputre and relate a particular reality that would
satisfy the basic=finite dimensions in reality.

The questions raised as to what was reality and what was finite was
detemined over the rseuming several centuries to justify three dimensional
'fine art' was expressed in the manner of a medium called sculpture; the
materials have changed by sculpture remains the fine art of three
dimensional expression. The painting, it was determined, was the most basic
of finite expressions of the two dimensional expression and although depth
of expression and luminessence were at point, here; the basic two
dimensional expression was always painting with variations of medium being
print, drawing et. al.

It was not until the end of the 20th century that strides to relate
photography to a third dimension, that of fixing light, did this discussion
come to form a basic=finite expression of a sensual dimension and that was
determined to be one reason that photography is recognized as a fine art.

Reference: Boris Blai, Barnagut Foundation.

Steve Shapiro
one more opinion


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