by tonyhallas » Sun Dec 27, 2009 9:43 pm
Hello group,
I have to agree with some of you that someone using this image to plot their way by the stars has had it ... isn't going to happen. This image started as a trip to the Fall River Golf Course ... we discovered this overlook from which you could see Mt. Lassen all the way to Mt. Shasta. In my mind I saw it at night with the Milky Way going from volcano to volcano ... OBVIOUSLY impossible since the volcanoes run N- S. But visually ... wow ... I have to tell you all that this image touched the hearts of millions of people on Christmas Day ... I had many, many compliments ... more than any other image I have ever done.
But this raises an issue with which I have been doing battle for some time ... and that is the issue of the "authentic" image. What is this? We already know that most people loved this image ... but to some, knowing the alignment of everything ... it had no value because it was a "fake". Vision counts for nothing, art counts for nothing, emotional impact counts for nothing ... the image is not allowed by the "authenticity police" ... oh poor world!
By this definition, every narrow band image, every CCD image, every DSLR image, every negative scanned to digital image ... even the images of Ansel Adams ( a superb lab technician) are fakes. Why? Because the images have been modified. The minute you touch those pixels, or burn and dodge like Adams did, the image is modified. Do you want to discuss where to draw the line? Should there be an "authenticity congress" complete with lobbyists to set standards?
Art doesn't work this way ...
In this case, I would have had no problem mentioning that the Milky Way was taken seperately the night before and strategically positioned over the volcanoes ... it doesn't detract from the vision of the image. Whether or not "astronomical art" can be used as an APOD is left to the discretion of the hosts who are artists in their own right.
Hope you all have a great and creative 2010,
Clear skies,
Tony
Hello group,
I have to agree with some of you that someone using this image to plot their way by the stars has had it ... isn't going to happen. This image started as a trip to the Fall River Golf Course ... we discovered this overlook from which you could see Mt. Lassen all the way to Mt. Shasta. In my mind I saw it at night with the Milky Way going from volcano to volcano ... OBVIOUSLY impossible since the volcanoes run N- S. But visually ... wow ... I have to tell you all that this image touched the hearts of millions of people on Christmas Day ... I had many, many compliments ... more than any other image I have ever done.
But this raises an issue with which I have been doing battle for some time ... and that is the issue of the "authentic" image. What is this? We already know that most people loved this image ... but to some, knowing the alignment of everything ... it had no value because it was a "fake". Vision counts for nothing, art counts for nothing, emotional impact counts for nothing ... the image is not allowed by the "authenticity police" ... oh poor world!
By this definition, every narrow band image, every CCD image, every DSLR image, every negative scanned to digital image ... even the images of Ansel Adams ( a superb lab technician) are fakes. Why? Because the images have been modified. The minute you touch those pixels, or burn and dodge like Adams did, the image is modified. Do you want to discuss where to draw the line? Should there be an "authenticity congress" complete with lobbyists to set standards?
Art doesn't work this way ...
In this case, I would have had no problem mentioning that the Milky Way was taken seperately the night before and strategically positioned over the volcanoes ... it doesn't detract from the vision of the image. Whether or not "astronomical art" can be used as an APOD is left to the discretion of the hosts who are artists in their own right.
Hope you all have a great and creative 2010,
Clear skies,
Tony