Yes, but showing a print is a quite different experience for both the person showing and for the viewer. A print is and feels real, just like a transparency or negative feels real and a digital file never will. For that matter, I never felt a Polaroid was worth showing. I never produced one that didn't suck, the best coming as tests on the back of a 'blad. I felt they were so poor I stopped testing.
It's exactly what you say later, when you refer to the artifact. I feel you are in some dispute with yourself there, or I have just not understood you properly.
Rob
Well, you may have misunderstood me, or for that matter, I may have misunderstood Wenders, but I don’t
feel in dispute with myself.
I take Wenders to mean that a photo today is a way to show someone something—an idea, a place, a costume, or to remember it yourself. The digital image is just a medium to that end. But really, so was the Polaroid in the way a filmmaker used it. (At least this filmmaker.) It was just a form of journal. The photo had no importance; only the information mattered.
But when i look back, as I do from time to time, it is much more pleasurable to look at a box of photos or polaroids than a folder of digital images. So I agree with you that the experience is different with the “real” photo. That’s what I meant in talking about the artifact. But in the way we used Polaroids in the course of filmmaking, that only seems true in reflection, when the artifact becomes important for different reasons than the original purpose of the image.
An aside—when I was a young man, I was a designer and photographer. I did good work, but made very little money. I was hired to do a year-long television project, and produced some award-winning work, but at the end of it, coming back to my studio, I had nothing I could hold in my hands. I missed the prints or the stack of annual reports one got at the end of a job. So I swore off television for a time. The printed work was just more satisfying. (At least until I was offered three times what I was making to go back to doing TV)