William Eggleston: The Last Dyes
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 26 ноя 2024
- American artist William Eggleston’s discovery of the dye-transfer process in the 1970s-primarily used in advertising at the time-was crucial to his move from primarily working in black-and-white to producing color photographs due the richness of tonal depth and color saturation.
In this video, dye-transfer specialists Guy Stricherz and Irene Malli take you behind the scenes of the labor-intensive technique behind the works in William Eggleston: The Last Dyes, the last major group of photographs ever to be printed using this method.
William Eggleston: The Last Dyes is on view at David Zwirner Los Angeles from November 16th, 2024 to February 1st, 2025.
#WilliamEggleston #DyeTransfer #DavidZwirner #ColorPhotography #Kodak
what an absolute treat for find this wonderful video. Thank you.
Bravo! sadanother method gone! Digital is here. But never equal.. Again Bravo!
wonderful. much peace and love from me to you.
We must return to truly investing our interest and our money into these rare forms of technical artistry. I truly value this process. I hope they have apprentices who will take on the task in the future. There's the Frisson process in Paris too which creates wonderful prints. I only hope AI disgusts us in the near future and we return to film, cibachrome, dye transfer, and silver gelatin.
outstanding!!!
very good
I worked at two different photography labs in the Boston area in the late '80s/early '90s that did dye transfer printing. I really wish I had kept a few sample prints for my own collection! The prints were far superior than C-Prints and Cibachromes. I wonder how they match up to modern day inkjet prints printed on the best papers that we have today.
momentous !
legend
Warning: this short video is more about dye-transfer technique than Eggleston's art. But it's great anyway. Eggleston is my absolute favorite as far as American photography is concerned (call it street photography or artistic photography, not so important after all). The more I look at his works, the deeper I go - even after many years. Thanks. And greetings from Poland.
Art only needs to be interesting.