Dusty Ayres
Commodore
The lunch-break hike to King and Yonge could be better. It’s slushy, the wind is slicing through my coat, but I’m still excited. There are three rolls of film in my pocket, all shot New Year’s Eve. That’s New Year’s 2010, not 1990.
Yes, I still take photos on film, and while I have a digital camera, I’m not enjoying it much any more. About a year ago, digital shots started to seem disposable, inconsequential and dull to me. It was like they lacked a soul.
So I picked up my old 35mm cameras from the 70s and 80s, blew the dust off and have effectively revived my love of picture-taking. Anyone who feels the sheen wearing off the digital age might be well served by a little analog augmentation.
Walter Benjamin, in The Work Of Art In The Age Of Mechanical Reproduction, warned in the 30s that mechanization would rob irreproducible art of its “aura’’ – and film photography was his example of this robbery.
But we now live in a world where even that mechanized photography has found its aura-debaser in the effortless digital realm. And it seems to me this could apply to vinyl vs. MP3s, print vs. the Internet and, increasingly, books vs. e-readers.
So what’s going on?
“People say [pre-digital items] have more soul because they’re scarce,” says Andrew Potter, culture critic and author of the forthcoming The Authenticity Hoax.
He notes that it’s very common to hold onto the idea that an earlier medium was better once it’s been replaced by something cheaper, more popular and more accessible. And that's not to say it wasn't. It's tough to argue that a highly compressed MP3 would satisfy the ears of a 70s high-fidelity “weenie,” as Potter puts it.
Of course, status yearnings are at play for those harkening back to the days before digitization freed us up to shoot bazillions of photos or stash 30,000 audio files on an iPod. But there's probably more to it.
“You still have to go to Paris to see the Mona Lisa,” says Potter. “I think something is lost when its instantly reproducible or copyable. Lost is that sort of halo or unique position in our spiritual and aesthetic lives.
Down on digital
Having just bough a secondhand SLR camera because the crappy digital one I had wasn't that great, I can see what the author's saying a little bit (I still plan to use digital somewhat, if I can get a better camera than the 4-megapixel thing I've got now.)