Originally published as From Darkroom To Daylight, Harvey Wang
Cofounders: Taj Forer and Michael Itkoff
Designer: Ursula Damm
Copy editor: Elizabeth Bell
© 2015 Daylight Community Arts Foundation
Text © Harvey Wang & Amy Brost. Interviews used with permission of the subjects.
All rights reserved
ISBN 978-1-942084-29-7
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior permission in writing of copyright holders and of the publisher.
Daylight Books
E-mail: [email protected]
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
THE DARKROOM
MATERIALS: THE ENDANGERED AND THE EXTINCT
Photography Is Always Changing: Eric Taubman
The End of Kodachrome: Alex Webb and Jeff Jacobson
Photographic Papers: Paul Messier, Robert L. Shanebrook, Alison Rossiter, Howard Hopwood
THE DIGITAL REVOLUTION IN PHOTOGRAPHY
The Invention of the Digital Camera: Steven Sasson
The Invention of Photoshop: Thomas Knoll
The Decisive Moment Becomes Day to Night: Stephen Wilkes
New Realities: Ruud van Empel
On Photoshop: Richard Benson, Mark Bussell, John Cohen, David Goldblatt, Jerome Liebling, Platon, Stephen Wilkes
Photoshop Before “Photoshop”: Alfred Gescheidt
BRIDGING THE DIVIDE
A Platinum Printer Falls for Inkjet: Richard Benson
Going Back to the Delta: Eugene Richards
Two Centuries of Technology: Sally Mann
PERSPECTIVES ON THE DIGITAL (R)EVOLUTION
Takeshi Akagi
Adam Bartos
Deborah Bell
Richard Benson
Meghan Boody
Mark Bussell
John Cohen
Gregory Crewdson
John Cyr
Ruud van Empel
Elliott Erwitt
Jason Eskenazi
Alfred Gescheidt
David Goldblatt
Ken Hackman
Charles Harbutt
Chester Higgins Jr.
Howard Hopwood
Jeff Jacobson
Sid Kaplan
Edward Keating
Thomas Knoll
Jerome Liebling
Nathan Lyons
Sally Mann
Constantine Manos
Paul McDonough
Susan Meiselas
Paul Messier
Alison Nordström
Platon
Eli Reed
Eugene Richards
Alison Rossiter
Richard Sandler
Steven Sasson
Robert L. Shanebrook
Eric Taubman
George Tice
Jonathan Torgovnik
Alex Webb
Rebecca Norris Webb
Stephen Wilkes
AFTERWORD
I began taking pictures for real at the end of middle school. It was unusual to walk around with a camera in the Queens, New York, neighborhood where l lived, but from age 15, I was never without my Nikon camera. I would shoot black-and-white film and develop it in the basement darkroom of my house.
I loved the ritual of developing film and making prints: removing the exposed film from its metal canister, spooling the film onto reels in darkness, measuring the chemistry, and pouring each chemical into the developing tank. After the film was in the fixer, I could open the tank and see the negative images on the film for the first time.
When the film was dry, I’d cut the negatives into strips and make a contact sheet. The negatives were placed in an envelope, and a number was assigned to each envelope. The same number would be put on the corresponding contact sheet, and they were stored in boxes. Every year, a new box was added, and the contact sheets became a diary visually documenting my passage through the years.
For over 25 years, I exposed black-and-white film, developed it, and made contact sheets and prints.
I stopped adding to this multi-decade collection of sequential envelopes in about 2000, when I started to shoot more color, and eventually to shoot digital.
Some time later, I realized something had changed about my relationship to photography.
I wasn’t sure that the new ways of working suited me. I wondered if other photographers’ worlds were turned upside down when they stopped mixing chemicals and isolating themselves in the dark.
—Harvey Wang
This book is the product of my interviews with photographers and important figures in the field of photography conducted from 2008 to 2013. All the text in these pages is excerpted from those interviews and from correspondence that followed.
I remember my first experience in a
darkroom, of watching an image come
up in a black-and-white developer tray,
and it is astonishing.
—Alison Rossiter
When I saw that print come
up in the developer, I said,
“I have found my life’s work.”
—Alfred Gescheidt
Not a unique story.
You see a print come up
in the developer, and you