To Do or To Own? (or the Photographer’s Dilemma)

By Andrea Monti

To Own or To Do is the photographer’s version of Erich Fromm’s dilemma posed in his famous essay, ‘To Have or to Be’. I don’t have the authority to talk about a complex topic such as the relationship between individual frustration or lack of accomplishment and compensatory or self-delusional behaviour. I would rather like to focus on how putting gear ownership over gear use affects the ability to take meaningful shots.

Like many fellow photographers, I have been affected by the Gear Acquisition Syndrome, which in my case has manifested itself not in a quest for a —whatever it means — ‘perfect image’ but rather a ‘prepper’ mentality. In other words, I stockpiled cameras, lenses, adapters, filters and so on in the hope of not having to complain about a lack of equipment should a specific need arise. This attitude may prima facie make sense: the more your arsenal is full of different gear, the more you can handle whatever comes your way. There are, however, some practical constraints that challenge this assumption.

The first one is, simply, the budget. One of the criteria to calculate the fees of an assignment is how much of the money goes to cover the equipments’ cost. It doesn’t take a PhD in math to understand that the higher the gear cost, the more one should work and/or charge for a job. And if the kit is going to change from time to time the photographer is entagled in a loop from which he will never escape. It would be more efficient to spend the money earned on other things, such as learning how to improve your visual style, which can raise your professional level. This leads to the second point.

Another problem with this attitude is how it relates to proficiency. Mastering a tool up to the level where its handling becomes second nature takes time. The more complicated is the hardware, the longer is the learning process. As far as photography is concerned, this issue is particularly relevant to lenses. While, indeed, learning to use the new button and joystick layout of a camera may take a  (relatively) short time, this is not the case with lenses and sensors. Sharpness, chroma, distortion and all the usual charcteristics used to judge the performance of a lens are only a fraction – a tiny one, indeed – of the overall knowledge necessary to get the best out of a lens. The aestethics of the results and how to achieve them, by contrast, takes more and more time because only a diuturnal real life use in the most diverse environments and shooting conditions can provide enough feedback to build knowledge from the experience.

Finally, it is worth remembering that it is not necessary to have the ‘best’ equipment to take good pictures – whatever that means. Depending on the nature of the assignment or the industry in which you are working, a tack-sharp photograph is not always a feature that, by itslef, makes it compelling enough to deserve payment. In my photography lectures, I always use three photographs – Tankman, The Falling Soldier and Napalm Girl – as examples where the narrative power of an image has nothing to do with expensive equipment.

Contrary to what one might think, the do-rather-than-own approach is also common among ‘amateurs’, i.e. those lucky photographers, often no less capable than ‘professionals’, who are free to choose when, what and how to take pictures without the pressure of deadlines and pending payments. Indeed, if one has chosen photography as a personal journey, it comes without saying that the his main goal is to take pictures instead of wasting time pixel-peeping an image or comparing this camera to that camera.

Finally, I’d like to make it clear that I see nothing wrong with collecting or trading equipment to learn how it’s made or how it works, even if you don’t use it in the field. Similarly, I think there is nothing wrong with collecting equipment for the sheer pleasure of owning it without knowing how to use it.

Of course, as long as you don’t break the bank.

 

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About The Author

By Andrea Monti
My name is Andrea Monti. I’m an Italian free-lance journalist, photographer and – in my spare time – an hi-tech lawyer. The works I am more proud of are covering live jazz, pop and rock concerts for an Italian online music magazine and Opera and prose for a 200 years-old theatre. I also do sport photography mainly in athletics and fighting disciplines. You may find out more about me on https://andrea.monti.photography
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Comments

Art Meripol on To Do or To Own? (or the Photographer’s Dilemma)

Comment posted: 24/02/2025

Your thoughts here perfectly align with my experience. I too have collected and kept a lot of gear 'just in case' I had a shoot that might need that gear. I love shooting. It fulfills my creative soul. But I too love great gear. However over the last year my loaded shelves of gear have started to weigh on me. One day in the not-to-distant future I would have to get rid of it all. I was starting to feel a lot of pressure to clean out. I still work and have a full frame and a MF system for work. But I had a ton of gear going back 40 or more years. Recently I pulled EVERY THING out and made a list. I ended up giving a lot of video gear to a small video crew I know. Then I filled the back of my car, the back seat and even the front passenger seat with the rest of the gear and donated it to a photography/art school at a nearby university. It felt great! All going to somewhere it has a second life but all out of my space. I definitely feel lighter and even my wife is both impressed I did it and glad to see it gone. I still have too much but it's only things I use.
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Greg Hammond on To Do or To Own? (or the Photographer’s Dilemma)

Comment posted: 24/02/2025

Spot on. And I really like Art’s ideas about what to do with all that stuff I tried, and maybe even liked, but not enough to use it repeatedly.
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