Oh yes marvin I feel right at home It's been two years since I have been active and this topic is still being debated.
I think you are correct a well taken photo can be a great tool and I still have reference photos. I used them so I could continue to work when my live reference was not available. Or in the case of illustration work when live reference was impractical. But I would warn against just copying reference.
I have seen good artists paint very nice images from a combination of some very poor photos (by poor in the sense that they were nothing special as a photo) And I have seen artists produce very weak paintings from excellent photos.
In this thread:
Go for excellence in portraiture
http://forum.portraitartist.com/show...hlight=William
I do not feel bill meant to imply artist never use photos it was how the photos were being used he objected to. After all he admits to painting from photo reference himself.
You also have the skills so you can use photos and not fall into the trap that many artist do when painting from photos.
I may not have the same ability that you have but I feel my drawing ability is better then most (when I have been drawing regularly) but when I was under pressure to produce work to pay bills I took commissions to paint from photos supplied by the client that I knew were not good enough or were far from what I felt would make a good painting. But I did it for the money. I struggled for hours and days trying to paint from these bad images only to produce a painting that was junk. The client liked it but I would not even sign my name to it.
But I have produced some very nice paintings using a combination of live sittings and photo reference I took myself .
If you your studio has proper lighting the photos will be very usefully but if you have no idea how to light your subject even painting that subject live will not be any better and the photos will be of little use.
So yes painting from life alone is not going to make your painting any better then one painted from a photo. But copying a photo even a great photo is not going to produce a great painting ether unless you know what to do with the information in your photo and just what makes a good painting. And you also must know how to produce a better image then the photo.
I see a lot of work that I would rather hang the original photo on my wall then the painting done from it.
Jack Martin said it best to me this way when critiquing one of my illustrations: He said, "You have to bring more to this then you did you have to do what photoshop can not do." I felt I had a great painting but when I looked at it that way I knew although It was very accurate It could have been done it in the computer I simply had very nicely painted copies of my reference.
After art school I did Illustration work and most of it was so formulaic that I just did that very thing I used Adobe Illustrator and photoshop and scanned in my reference and manipulated it in the computer. Why bother painting a copy of the reference in paint when I could achieve a better copy faster in the computer (notice I did not say a better painting I said better copy)
But I no longer have any desire to produce copies I want to produce original creations. I do not care if the painting is a accurate copy as long as it is accurately drawn the way I intended. I am not saying to except bad drawing and when working on draw well accuracy is the goal once you can achieve that goal that is when the fun starts. Sometimes not coping the reference as it is can produce a more convincing and more interesting image then an exactly accurate copy. But If you start out using photos alone and even going so far as to trace photos you simply can't get more then what is in the photo.
Now that said I have seen many paintings that the artist was not even able to get a accurate copy of a photo never mind go beyond that.
So as a tool to train your eye I see no difference in copying a photo vs copying a old masters drawing except by copying the drawing you also learn line work and technique buy copying their technique.
I often pull out old reference photos and do detail drawings from them it is a great tool but when I was a actively working artist I would spend 3 mornings every week at a open studio life drawing session and I find that there is no substitute to drawing from life.