This whole thread is very much a mirror of human behaviour when it comes to new things people don't want to see or understand.
The basic human response is to attack what they fear. It's happened throughout history and it happens all the time on TP when someone posts something outside of the comfort zone of what might appear in amateur photography magazines.
And I would just like to add that I don't think we've even scratched the surface of creativity, or new ideas, one simply doesn't have to limit themselves to snowdrops in February, fireworks in November etc etc.
I'm intrigued. If you don't mind me asking T what is it you like about it?
Thanks by the way Byker for the Peter Fraser links - I just watched all the video sections end-to-end ...
Possibly. My point was that the act of photographing is more of a craft than an art. With staged shots, the art is in the arranging of elements, much as it would be with designing a theatre stage set.
With e.g. landscape, nature has done the impressive bit and the photographer's skill is the craftmanship which records the scene as he wishes it to be recorded.
I have no problem with the result of that process being referred to as art but I take issue with the process being called art when it is more of a craft.
Steve.
So what you are suggesting is that Gregory Crewdson is not a photographer, and nor is Tim Walker. You suggest that because some of the skills that make the images what they are, are not actually camera skills then they can not be attributed to the author as a photographer.
It sounds like you dwelled on it for some time. I got a slightly different, less deep, impression from it based on less than 5 seconds viewing it. I did not feel it needed much more as it was "just an ordinary photo". I expect if you tell some people it is "special" they might dig deeper. But to me, with so many wonderful pictures around that you don't need to work hard at, where beauty just ouses out, I'll spend more time enjoying those. Even if I am told the photographer is supposed to be someone special. I don't mean to put anyone down. I just love the visual results more than the background. In a similar way to a picture of a bird in captivity compared to an identical one taken in the wild where a photographer may have put a lot of work in to track one down, set up a hide, and wait for 16 hours. As a photographer, the story of the wild is quite interesting. But when separated from the story, or for someone not interested in that, the wild picture looks no better.Of course.. it says lonely, you have a huge dark totally empty room, what looks like stark walls, concrete floor, it's not inviting, well not to some, then you have the white panel, it looks and again this is just to me, like it could be a void, creep in there and escape, escape the stark room, the loneliness but is it to something better? that could be interpreted to how you look at it each day
It sounds like you dwelled on it for some time. I got a slightly different, less deep, impression from it based on less than 5 seconds viewing it. I did not feel it needed much more as it was "just an ordinary photo". I expect if you tell some people it is "special" they might dig deeper. But to me, with so many wonderful pictures around that you don't need to work hard at, where beauty just ouses out, I'll skip those snaps. Even if I am told the photographer is supposed to be someone special.
Great. But then to you it is maybe not 'just an ordinary photo'. Everyone has a slightly different 'ordinary'. I was only speaking of my position. It is interesting to see the many different views.. it could well be 'just an ordinary photo' but for some reason i liked it
Great. But then to you it is maybe not 'just an ordinary photo'. Everyone has a slightly different 'ordinary'. I was only speaking of my position. It is interesting to see the many different views.
It is a point of view that what people like that are doing is using photography to record a construction - in the way that photographs are used to record art installations and performance art. The difference in these examples is that the end result is always intended to be the photograph. It could be suggested that what they are doing relies more on 'craft' skills than, for example, a landscape photographer as they not only have to know how to use their camera and understand composition, but also how to control lighting and so forth.
For my part, while I can admire that sort of stuff for its technical brilliance I find it a little stale and I don't think it plays to the strength of the medium for recording what is there already. Man Ray said that he photographed what he could not paint and painted what he could not photograph. A Crewsdon set-up could be painted, and if painted badly might resemble a Vettriano!
Of course I freely admit that my taste in photography is biased in favour of documentary/straight photography when I refer you to the Paul Reas quote in my earlier post.
But this is part of why photography is so confusing. All photographs share the same 'look' no matter how they have been made or for what purpose, and so the temptation is to judge them all by the same criteria.
But anything that can be recorded by a camera can also be painted, can it not?
You finding it a little stale has no bearing on the argument. You don't judge a piece of artwork's worth by how much you like it![]()
As for judging similar genres in the same way because they look the same, I disagree strongly. I wouldn't judge Winogrand's street photography as being the same as the endless parade of old men on benches that passes for street in this forum, yet they're mainly black and white, all available light, and mainly pretty "straight". However... they're... if you'll excuse the pun.. streets apartAll photos don't have the same look at all IMO. Black and white for instance. Very few amateurs can satisfactorily recreate that straight black and white film look. Most people just over process it to death instead.
It's these images and this thread that worry me a little about the TAOP course I just signed up for. I'm just not sure I'm capable of the analytical view I can see on show from others in here that I know are on or have done the course.
Context is more important for some images than for others. Some pictures you can just look at and go "wow, great picture, I wish I'd taken that" and others you look at and go "What? Something is missing, because this photograph is giving me nothing at all". That missing something is the context in which it was taken or in which it is presented.
Maybe the differences between us all aren't who likes these images and who doesn't, but instead who just says "it's crap" and those who ask "What is this, why is it being presented and what was the reason for taking it or presenting it". You can still ask those questions and think its crap or pretentious or whatever. In asking the question you've looked beyond the individual arrangement of light and dark in the image and into the story behind its capture or presentation.
Regardless, it and this thread have made me ask some questions of myself and I'll write a bit about it on my blog which probably just means I'm getting into this student lark!
When does the bar open?
I didn't intend to dwell on it, but if i am honest i was drawn back to that one, i can't tell you why, well apart from what i felt going back to it and it could have been anyones photo, more often than not i am totally surprised at the kind of photos shown on these discussions, famous artist or back to the what is art and stuff, i looked at most of those and my first thought was if someone posted those here what on earth would the crit be... yet they are meant to speak volumes apparently..... it could well be 'just an ordinary photo' but for some reason i liked it
It's a photo of an installation though isn't it. The representation of the bright light from being released from prison, a representation of the white out of satellite images from the US taking all over before afganistan, white cat in a snowstorm...
I see that more of an artistic statement rather than an image
So we're back to Berger and the Discontinuities or ambiguities of an image without the description.
With the description, the artists intentions make sense, without it you could joke about white cat in snowstorm, or just say "that's crap".
Yup, and he got absolutely flamed for it, yet look at the images as a series and they started making sense. I really liked them, yet he was driven away. Quite a shameful moment in TP's history.
The other thing I'd say about the article is that 'explanations' are cringeworthy - if a photo has impact that impact should come from the photo ... if it has to be explained in order to make any sense then the photographer has failed and the photo of itself isn't powerful