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Images of Our Flies
You know
what? Everybody says,”You know
what?” these days. I’ll try not to do it again, but you know what, those of us
who have loved, studied, collected, and have used artificial fishing flies are
today spoiled to death with images of them.
There is
a file here, close at my hand, labeled “Fly Plates”. It is my collection, over
seventy years, of colored images of trout and salmon flies. The color
photography of flies used to be, by present standards, rather coarse and
disappointing. But these early images, rare as they were, were all that we had
and we treasured them.
The work
of the hands of illustrators and artists, of course, were always fine and full
of individuality and insight. They never aged. They were our very own
lovely flies, having passed through the artist’s imagination and hand. (I wish
I could show you some in my collection.)
But, as
the years rolled on, the photography of flies got better and better, more
accurate and finer in detail. It has got so good that now we might fairly be
said to be in the golden age of angling photography. And there is so much of
it, that I have stopped collecting. I am surfeited.
Worse
yet, with my own little digital camera, I can contribute to this plethora of
images. There is no fly, however unworthy, that we can’t easily document and
force on other anglers.
Perhaps
the greatest of all the tiers, photographers, collectors, was Paul Schmookler
of Massachutets.
One wonders,
what, after Schmookler, there is left to do in the graphics of fishing flies….
You can only gasp at the wonder of his giant books-- if you are lucky enough to
own any of them or can otherwise get your hands on them. Paul’s fault (I can call
him “Paul” because I used to write for him when he was publishing) is to have
made me now a bit blasé. I still love to look at flies, especially the older
rank of traditional patterns, but the endless images of “nothing” tiny midges,
nondescript nymphs, and creations of ugly foam have sullied my taste.
There is
that about the advanced technologies that dulls us somehow…. The lens gets between us and the star.
1 comment:
An artist friend of mine told me that a painting manipulates the movement of the eye in a way that photography can't. Paintings also manipulate lighting to evoke emotions in a way that eludes photography. There is something about a pastel palette that I find calming. The mere act of spending hours producing a print or painting gives it a grandeur that cannot be replicated in a click of a camera.
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