Do you know who ansel adams is?

Have you heard of Ansel adams

  • Yes

    Votes: 216 92.7%
  • No

    Votes: 17 7.3%

  • Total voters
    233
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Must admit it's made me tempted to go see if the library has a decent photo book section.

Good idea, I'll do the same before the end of the week. Hmm, I have a college-of-knowledge (University) near-by, I wonder if they grant library access to yokels...

Edit: It looks like they do!
 
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I came rather late to this thread. I voted, then started reading. Now I know I have a low boredom threshold, but really...

It seems to me that there are two sorts of photographers; the first sort are interested in cameras, the other kind are interested in pictures. Although I own rather a lot of cameras and even more lenses (all accumulated over fifty-odd years) I’m definitely in the second camp. Much as I admire many of them for beautiful engineering etc, they are all really just tools to make pictures.

So I’ve been looking at pictures avidly all my life; not just photographs but drawings and paintings as well. I’ve learned so much about the visual arts this way which has helped place my own modest efforts into some sort of context. So of course I have looked (and still do so) at the wonderful imagery of Ansel Adams, David Bailey, Duffy, Weegee...I could go on for some time! I'm particularly grateful to Ansel Adams for the zone system, which once mastered gave me a much greater insight into how to expose, and why to expose in a particular way. I'd recommend reading it, and then playing with it to anyone; even if you don't use it subsequently, it will greatly improve one's appreciation and control of the light we all work with.

I’m mystified by those who say they have no need to look at the work of great photographers – one or two in this thread said they only looked at pictures by a few contemporary photographers for inspiration, which is rather like saying that one reads a newspaper because its editorial slant accords with one’s existing views; if that’s the case, what’s the point of reading it? It’s all very well to attempt living in one’s own little photographic bubble but the inescapable fact is that we all live in a continuum of visual imagery which extends far back into history and will stretch into the future a long way beyond our own brief existence, and one important factor is to understand where we as individual image makers are within that stream. And if you look only to a few contemporary photographers for ideas, you have to ask yourself a pretty basic question – where do those individual get their inspiration from? I think the chances are very high that names like Adams, Bailey et al would figure prominently in their replies.
 
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I’m mystified by those who say they have no need to look at the work of great photographers

Why? Is it not reasonable to want to take photos and pursue a hobby without studying how someone did it donkey's years ago?
 
I mained to see it last week and I'd definately recommend it although I wouldnt really call it a career overview, most of the focus is on his pictures of water(rivers, the sea, waterfalls etc). There are a handful of really massive wall sized prints that are espeically impressive.

Cheers for the semi-review. I have a week off in a month (wooohoo), so plan to go then!
 
Gramps, that's the bubble I was talking about. If you wrote music, would you feel no need to listen to other people's pieces? Seeing what work others have done is inescapably part of understanding your own. And without understanding there is little if any point in creating...
 
Why? Is it not reasonable to want to take photos and pursue a hobby without studying how someone did it donkey's years ago?

But surely you would want to look for places for influence, everyone has dry points and looking at past masters normally heralds a flash of inspiration/urges you onwards and upwards.
 
Gramps, that's the bubble I was talking about. If you wrote music, would you feel no need to listen to other people's pieces? Seeing what work others have done is inescapably part of understanding your own. And without understanding there is little if any point in creating...

But surely you would want to look for places for influence, everyone has dry points and looking at past masters normally heralds a flash of inspiration/urges you onwards and upwards.

If I want someone to teach me I will book a workshop and go along to work in the field with my camera - if the 'teacher' demonstrates how to use my camera for best results in the field, helps me consider composition etc I may well benefit and even come back again.
If however he sits me down beside the beautiful landscape, tells me to put my camera down and starts talking to me about past artists I will switch off and never return.
That's just the way it is, I don't want to study photography I want to do photography
 
That "Double Barrel" was cracking tune. Wonder what became of Dave?
 
Calm down dear, it's only a discussion! :D

If you teach photography then doubtless you and your students give time to research and understand the work of those considered experts in the field ... that's fairly understandable.
However look at it from my point, I work and I have a multitude of other interests and projects - photography for me is a form of relaxation, a casual interest/hobby, call it what you will.

Hmm.. but you make it sound as if researching a wider sphere of influence would somehow be a chore, or no longer your hobby. If you love photography, wouldn't it, and shouldn't that be an enjoyable experience? After all, I'm not suggesting people undertake massive amounts of research... but rather simply look at stuff they wouldn't ordinarily look at. I think what baffles me most about this thread, is the way people are so vehemently against looking at certain work, and so dismissive of it. There's a kind of "No, I don't know who Adams is, and I don't bloody well care either". All I['m suggesting is that peopel just widen their net when it comes to looking at images for inspiration, yet some are reacting as if I'd suggested they slam their tackle in the dishwasher door!

There seems to be a robust anti-art movement in amateur photography that is self-destructive and creatively atrophying. I find it worrying, and only serves to widen the already yawning chasms between amateur, commercial professional and exhibiting artist/professional. It's as if these groups of people are wholly separate and have no common ground. It's a shame that I have to get called elitist and arrogant because I have a differing opinion. In most other creative arenas, prejudice is an anathema to be avoided... but it's often embraced in photographic circles.



Would I come to your college to learn about photography? No!
Does that mean that I am not interested in photography? No!
I would rather use my time getting out with my camera.

Fair enough. I'm not engaged in this thread as a recruitment drive you know :)

Getting out with your camera is great.. of course, but it depends what you want from education.

If I want someone to teach me I will book a workshop and go along to work in the field with my camera - if the 'teacher' demonstrates how to use my camera for best results in the field, helps me consider composition etc I may well benefit and even come back again.
If however he sits me down beside the beautiful landscape, tells me to put my camera down and starts talking to me about past artists I will switch off and never return.

That's because your only interest is technical. You would want to be taught how to take photographs, and only that. That's fine if you think taking great photographs is only a technical exercise, and there are plenty of courses for that: City &Guilds, courses, A Levels etc. That's all they'll teach you though... how to operate a camera, and "rules" of composition, or post processing techniques. Hands on stuff. They alone don't make someone a great photographer though do they? I think you must know this.



That's just the way it is, I don't want to study photography I want to do photography as I am at the end rather than the beginning of my learning life.

Then that's fine... go and do it then :) If all you want to do is take photographs, you don't need ANY education that you couldn't provide yourself. However, that's you - not everyone. Maybe.. forgive me... I don't mean to be rude, but maybe you're a bit too set in your ways. Maybe ANY photographic education is not for you. Nothing wrong with that either... just so long as creatively you will not move forward.. only technically.


Does that make me a bad person? No, it's just the way it is and I won't be in isolation on this forum.
You obviously have a more 'academic' interest in photography and good for you ... having seen some of your work you are obviously also a skilled photographer, and good for you.
We are not all the same and there is room for us all ... we can even benefit from one another.
Step back dear, relax, don't get so intense! :)

My reaction was because of nothing you said. It was the Two Ronnies who have taken to following me around trashing everything I say. But sod them... not worth the effort of typing about them.

I'm sure... in fact, I KNOW you're not in isolation in this forum. However, if you actually read everything I've written, all I'm suggesting is that people open their minds a little, and lose the "I don't look at other photographers work" attitude, and the "art is all BS and elitist crap" attitude. In any other arena, it's expected that proponents of that media would be actively reading, and researching about the medium's history, leading figures, up and coming artists, as well as their contemporaries. Why is photography different?

I offer an explanation. You.. just want to take photographs. You therefore.. and hear me out... have no great interest in photography. Taking photographs, yes, equipment, yes, but not learning about photography. You would probably be willing to study the taking of images and other technical aspects, but... is that all there is to photography? No.. of course not.

thats right I forgot that he had time off. Didn't he come back with a duplicate account and say something along the lines of "go screw yourselves I don't want to be part of this forum anymore"? seems like a 180

So what if I did? Does it make this discussion any less relevant? Maybe I decided to come back because the majority aren't the same as you, and the other two, and that to stay away would effectively be giving you exactly what you want. I'm getting sick to death of this little clique of bigots trying to discredit everything I type in this forum. I get passionate about this subject because I think it's important, and I write expansively on it.. fine.. if you don't like that, then tough, but I've curbed my excesses in terms of my lack of ability to suffer fools lightly, and since my suspension have been very careful of other's sensibilities. You still however, seem to be on a mission to discredit me. I can only assume therefore you see me as a threat... which is quite flattering. It is however, annoying... I have reported you.

And if you look only to a few contemporary photographers for ideas, you have to ask yourself a pretty basic question – where do those individual get their inspiration from? I think the chances are very high that names like Adams, Bailey et al would figure prominently in their replies.

I can't agree more.

Why? Is it not reasonable to want to take photos and pursue a hobby without studying how someone did it donkey's years ago?

Because you have a wider frame of reference to work with. You'll be better able to judge where your work fits in. You will also have a wider array of creative tools to apply to your own images because you will have been influenced by a much wider range of creative imagery. It's not rocket science this... if you look at hardly anything, or just work from other hobbyists on Flickr etc, then you're just passing the same ideas around and it quickly becomes stale and before long, your work starts to look the same as everyone else's. Is that not reason enough?
 
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ive read this thread, and I have to agree with Pookeyhead(!) it is very important for photographers to view other peoples works to really find a style that you like.
To not at least glance at other works would slow down your own photographic development
 
In any other arena, it's expected that proponents of that media would be actively reading, and researching about the medium's history, leading figures, up and coming artists, as well as their contemporaries. Why is photography different?

Is it so different? You must have heard term 'Sunday painter. People who go to night school classes to learn to paint in watercolour or oil to make paintings that are not art. They have as little interest in Emin or Wallinger as some here are professing to have in Adams. Although they may know a little about Renoir. All they wish to do is to paint nice pictures. They have no ambitions or pretensions beyond that.

In all hobbies there are those who strive to be as good as they possibly can and to immerse themselves in it's history and more, and those who do it for the simple pleasure of doing it. There is an undeniable pleasure in just pressing a button and hearing the the shutter fire. That you can also make a picture while doing that is almost a bonus!

I guess what I am saying is that I can see both sides of this debate. Although I couldn't conceive of wanting to plough a lone furrow to make photographs that are nothing more than 'nice pictures' without really challenging myself, and to learn nothing of the history, theory or philosophy of photography, I can understand that that there are people who want nothing more than that from their hobby.

Trying to turn them from what could be termed 'pleasure photographers' into 'serious photographers' is likely an unwinnable battle. Just because their aspirations appear, to you, to be extremely limited doesn't mean that they do not get satisfaction and enjoyment from taking photographs, and from trying to improve their photographs within their own terms of reference.

Where this disparity of approaches to photography stem from is the very simplicity of the medium. No matter how you approach photography all there is to it is; frame, expose, print. (In terms of film, that is. Digitally the last becomes upload I suppose!) The level of thought you put into those three elements is purely a personal choice. As is what you do with the results.

For me it is this simplicity that is the greatest strength of photography. With photography being a (the?) most egalitarian medium I think people should be allowed to pursue it in any way they choose, rather than having one set of values pushed down their throats as The Set Of Values which must be followed.

Most people do not like being told what they ought to do. A more subtle approach to encourage a broadening of outlook might be to make gentle suggestions for work to be viewed, books to be read, in order that enlightenment might be follow.

Rather than castigate people for not knowing who a photographer is, or not wanting to know, a few links might be in order to challenge people's views of what photography, and art, can be. :)
 
Well I am seriously thinking of going to college to "study" photography and I would be quite happy if the tutor/s had the attitude and approach to the subject as David. I agree with Gramps too, if I just want to learn the technical side of taking nice photos I would stay as I am and do the odd workshop here and there.

I think it is definitely a personality thing and or expectation in the subject or hobby, if that's what it is to the individual.

I have had a camera for a little over a year and at first I loved taking nice photos of the countryside etc but recently I have been drawn more and more into the subject and finding it increasingly fascinating studying the so called "Masters" and interesting work. It is all quite exciting for me as I have a love for learning and knowledge and a growing passion for photography.

When I studied to become a stonemason/carver it didn't take long to be reading all about Michelangelo, Rodin etc and being inspired and awe struck at the work the produced and why and how the created it.

Anyway I better go and finish reading Susan Sontag On Photography :D:)
 
Hmm.. but you make it sound as if researching a wider sphere of influence would somehow be a chore, or no longer your hobby. If you love photography, wouldn't it, and shouldn't that be an enjoyable experience? After all, I'm not suggesting people undertake massive amounts of research... but rather simply look at stuff they wouldn't ordinarily look at. I think what baffles me most about this thread, is the way people are so vehemently against looking at certain work, and so dismissive of it. There's a kind of "No, I don't know who Adams is, and I don't bloody well care either". All I['m suggesting is that peopel just widen their net when it comes to looking at images for inspiration, yet some are reacting as if I'd suggested they slam their tackle in the dishwasher door!

For me it would be a chore, I do a lot of studying of other things more important to me and I don't class 'study' as a relaxation and that's what photography is for me.
Reference books I look at from time to time include:
  • The Photographer's Eye/Mind - Michael Freeman
  • Mastering Digital Photography - Michael Freeman
  • The Hot Shoe Diaries - Joe Mc Nally
  • Take Better Landscape Photographs - Guy Edwardes
  • 5000+ DAys
and a number of other books and DVD's but I don't 'study' them I 'refer' to them and I don't feel the need to investigate loads of others just to round out my knowledge ... but I've already said that.

There seems to be a robust anti-art movement in amateur photography that is self-destructive and creatively atrophying. I find it worrying, and only serves to widen the already yawning chasms between amateur, commercial professional and exhibiting artist/professional. It's as if these groups of people are wholly separate and have no common ground. It's a shame that I have to get called elitist and arrogant because I have a differing opinion. In most other creative arenas, prejudice is an anathema to be avoided... but it's often embraced in photographic circles.

To be clear, I am not anti-art, I simply do not wish to take my 'research' into photography any further than I have already done, I simply want to take photographs ... if any I take are artistic I am pleased and that is a bonus ... I have no misguided views that I am a photographer of note :)

Fair enough. I'm not engaged in this thread as a recruitment drive you know :)

Getting out with your camera is great.. of course, but it depends what you want from education.

For me, photography is not an 'education', of course I do learn but as a by-product to what I do as a hobby and not as something I pursue in itself.

That's because your only interest is technical. You would want to be taught how to take photographs, and only that. That's fine if you think taking great photographs is only a technical exercise, and there are plenty of courses for that: City &Guilds, courses, A Levels etc. That's all they'll teach you though... how to operate a camera, and "rules" of composition, or post processing techniques. Hands on stuff. They alone don't make someone a great photographer though do they? I think you must know this.

Of course, 'technical ability', whilst essential to some degree, will never make a good photographer ... indeed a good photographer may have very limited 'technical ability' but have an instinctive 'eye' for a good photo. My wife who knows nothing about photography or even how to effectively use her camera, often takes some excellent photos that leave me wondering how (and I know she wouldn't know Ansel Adams from Coco Channel!).


Then that's fine... go and do it then :) If all you want to do is take photographs, you don't need ANY education that you couldn't provide yourself. However, that's you - not everyone. Maybe.. forgive me... I don't mean to be rude, but maybe you're a bit too set in your ways. Maybe ANY photographic education is not for you. Nothing wrong with that either... just so long as creatively you will not move forward.. only technically.

Yes, I am too set in my ways in many things, when you are my age you probably will be too - however I am moving forward creatively, albeit slowly, and probably in accord with the principle 'you get out what you put in' ... if I was prepared to make my 'education' in photography intensive then my move forward would undoubtedly be faster and better but it simply isn't my desire to invest that sort of commitment in time and energy for what photography does for me.


My reaction was because of nothing you said. It was the Two Ronnies who have taken to following me around trashing everything I say. But sod them... not worth the effort of typing about them.

Sad fact of life, more so on the Internet.

I'm sure... in fact, I KNOW you're not in isolation in this forum. However, if you actually read everything I've written, all I'm suggesting is that people open their minds a little, and lose the "I don't look at other photographers work" attitude, and the "art is all BS and elitist crap" attitude. In any other arena, it's expected that proponents of that media would be actively reading, and researching about the medium's history, leading figures, up and coming artists, as well as their contemporaries. Why is photography different?

Probably answered above.

I offer an explanation. You.. just want to take photographs. You therefore.. and hear me out... have no great interest in photography. Taking photographs, yes, equipment, yes, but not learning about photography. You would probably be willing to study the taking of images and other technical aspects, but... is that all there is to photography? No.. of course not.

I am fully aware that I don't know and will never know all there is to know about photography and you are right, I don't want to, it's just a hobby for me.

Because you have a wider frame of reference to work with. You'll be better able to judge where your work fits in. You will also have a wider array of creative tools to apply to your own images because you will have been influenced by a much wider range of creative imagery. It's not rocket science this... if you look at hardly anything, or just work from other hobbyists on Flickr etc, then you're just passing the same ideas around and it quickly becomes stale and before long, your work starts to look the same as everyone else's. Is that not reason enough?

Well personally I don't look at Flickr though I accept that many live in various groups there and I don't think I'm in the camp of trying to look like everyone else ... if I did I'm sure that I would have more comments on the pics I post here rather than having them pretty much ignored.
I like many things that others seem to decry (HDR etc? :D ) and some things that others swoon over I think is rubbish.

So I guess what I'm saying for me is that I don't believe that I am a photographic Philistine and I will never be a photographic icon but I enjoy my photography as a hobby, I pick up bits and pieces from a few books and been on a few workshops ... but basically that's all I want from it and I don't think that makes me, or anyone else, a lesser person.
 
Hmm.. but you make it sound as if researching a wider sphere of influence would somehow be a chore, or no longer your hobby. If you love photography, wouldn't it, and shouldn't that be an enjoyable experience?

You've hit on an interesting point here. There does, for some reason, seem to be a general attitude amongst certain photographers both pro and amateur that you can just potter on and do your own thing in your own way. And you can, of course you can, but when I look at that way of thinking logically it makes absolutely no sense to me personally.

I'm a professional sound engineer and musician with 17 years experience, I've only been seriously into photography for around 8 years but my musical upbringing has been tremendously helpful as I've been able to transfer many ways of thinking from music directly to photography (I see them very much as the same thing, you just see one and hear the other but the principles are essentially the same). To draw a musical analogy for not knowing who Ansel Adams was, it would be like me as a bassist not knowing who Jaco Pastorius was which is utterly unthinkable. If I had no awareness of such great players and hadn't taken the time to listen to them then I'd probably be a very dull and uninteresting bassist (in all fairness I probably am anyway but you know what I mean). Never really researching or taking the time to look at the work of other photographers would be like never listening to any music other than that I play.

I can't imagine never feeling the sheer joy of discovering a new artist. Never being moved to tears by music because you connect with it for whatever reason and it stirs your insides. Never standing in the crowd at a concert watching a band I really love totally forgetting there's an actual world outside the venue, being completely immersed in the moment like nothing else in the world exists...

...I also can't imagine never again opening a photo and having it's sheer beauty hit me so much my jaw drops. I can't imagine never again seeing a photo that expresses more than words could. Never again seeing a photo that's so inspirational it makes me want to pick up my camera and never, ever put it down.

As much as I respect people's right to make photography whatever they want it to be, I'll never, ever understand how people can only be concerned with their own work and never spend any real time looking at other people's. Musicians I know seem much more open to enjoying the work of other people, it's quite fascinating why photography can be so different. I've learned such a stupidly massive amount from looking at other people's work; I've gained huge inspiration, been given new ideas, and generally just damned well enjoyed it. I can't imagine not having that.

Anyway, better turn this record over. It's Joni Mitchell - with Jaco Pastorius on bass. :)
 
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I can't imagine never ... being moved to tears by music because you connect with it for whatever reason and it stirs your insides.

...I also can't imagine never again opening a photo and having it's sheer beauty hit me so much my jaw drops. I can't imagine never again seeing a photo that expresses more than words could.

But why do you imagine that a 'hobby' photographer would be any different?
Music can move me to tears or inspire me to some course of action.
Looking at some of the photos in '5000+ Days', for example, affects my human emotions. But ... photography is a relaxation to me, as is music ... neither is another commitment in my life.
 
I don't quite understand, where did I imagine/say such a thing?

Maybe you didn't and it was just how I read it ... easily done from just text :shrug:
 
I suspect this argument is taking place in myriad forums all over the world....just replace Ansel Adams with Michael Jordan, Charlie Chaplin, Janis Joplin, Carl Jung, etc....

Regards....and I've read about loads of photographers, I enjoy it. Personal choice.

Imagine a world where we all liked the same thing and agreed all the time...hell.

Cheers.
 
Indeed it is. Well to try make it a little clearer and hopefully do away with any chance of misinterpretation, it has nothing to do with whether photography is a hobby or a profession (it's a hobby for me so I'm certainly not assuming anything about "hobby" photographers as I am one). My point was that I find it insanely difficult to get my head around the idea of anyone who takes photos, makes music, paints, or does anything else vaguely artistic never really spending time looking at the work of others. For me personally I couldn't enjoy what I play and shoot unless I could enjoy what others do as well because what I do would seem kind of meaningless on its own.

I'm not being a Jehovah's witness of photography and saying you should go look at other people's work, I'm merely saying I can't understand those who don't.
 
Fair enough, I think where we may differ is in perhaps how much time and effort we might want to spend looking at the work of others.
 
What I am reading into all this is that some people like to take pictures but are not interested in photography. That is fine, my mother likes to take pictures but has no interest in the technical aspects of photography or any other photographers.

However, my mother isn't a member of a photography forum...
 
It has nothing to do with time though. I'm talking about a way of thinking; a mindset, an openness and willingness to learn from other people and enjoy what others do. You could spend 5 minutes a week doing that and it would still be better than simply not wanting to!

What I am reading into all this is that some people like to take pictures but are not interested in photography. That is fine, my mother likes to take pictures but has no interest in the technical aspects of photography or any other photographers.

However, my mother isn't a member of a photography forum...

What a great little statement. :)
 
... If all you want to do is take photographs, you don't need ANY education that you couldn't provide yourself. However, that's you - not everyone. Maybe.. forgive me... I don't mean to be rude, but maybe you're a bit too set in your ways. Maybe ANY photographic education is not for you. Nothing wrong with that either... just so long as creatively you will not move forward.. only technically...

Remind if you would, it seems to have slipped my mind. Who taught Adams his photography? Did he go to university and study it properly?

You seem to be suggesting that without formal education in photography, creativity is impossible. (To quote you again: Maybe ANY photographic education is not for you. Nothing wrong with that either... just so long as creatively you will not move forward.. only technically... )




I offer an explanation. You.. just want to take photographs. You therefore.. and hear me out... have no great interest in photography.

Huh????? :thinking::thinking::thinking:

Let me try that one again:

You.. just want to take photographs. You therefore.. and hear me out... have no great interest in photography. ????

By what form of logic can you propose that a person wishing to take photographs therefore has no great interest in photography? What is your understanding of the term 'logical fallacy'? If one of your students forwarded such an argument, would you allow it or challenge it?

I'm getting sick to death of this little clique of bigots trying to discredit everything I type in this forum... but I've curbed my excesses in terms of my lack of ability to suffer fools lightly, and since my suspension have been very careful of other's sensibilities.

Umm, perhaps you may like to re-read what you wrote there? What words would you have selected instead of 'little clique of bigots' had you not curbed your excesses in terms of your lack of ability to suffer fools lightly, and since your suspension not been so very careful of other's sensibilities?
 
Is it so different? You must have heard term 'Sunday painter. People who go to night school classes to learn to paint in watercolour or oil to make paintings that are not art. They have as little interest in Emin or Wallinger as some here are professing to have in Adams. Although they may know a little about Renoir. All they wish to do is to paint nice pictures. They have no ambitions or pretensions beyond that.

Nope... not different at all, but what IS different is the vehemence with which the wider interest in photography is dismissed as elitist by some in this thread. "Sunday Painters" as you refer to them will not for one minute think that someone in their intent forum discussing the merits of admiring and being influenced by the work of Tracy Emin is elitist. I reckon they'd actually KNOW it was a good thing to do, but simply can't be arsed. I find it very hard to believe that someone who paints would actually think that studying art was a bad thing... whether it was for them or not. In here though there is a strong opinion by some that studying the work of acknowledged greats is actually a complete waste of time and will have no affect on their ability to be photographers. If you aren't actually that bothered, and just want to take "nice" pictures, then fine.. but just admit it, as some in here have, and I respect that actually. It's the ones who argue against what is patently obvious: That studying more widely, and being influenced by a diverse range of artists will broaden your appreciation of the medium, and make your own work more diverse. It happens whether you like it or not... rather like living for a very long time in a certain place will probably affect your accent. Some however, if they try to resist their change of accent, will retain their old one. In the case of photography, it's the resistance that puzzles me.

In all hobbies there are those who strive to be as good as they possibly can and to immerse themselves in it's history and more, and those who do it for the simple pleasure of doing it. There is an undeniable pleasure in just pressing a button and hearing the the shutter fire. That you can also make a picture while doing that is almost a bonus!

Absolutely! That's what got me interested when I was about 8! I quickly wanted more from my images though. Even if someone doesn't want more from their images though, that's also fine. I just wish they'd admit it. Instead of saying "I've no great interest in photography, I just like taking pictures" they'll strenuously argue that all this talk of art, and history, and being influenced by those greater than yourself is just elitist clap trap.

I guess what I am saying is that I can see both sides of this debate. Although I couldn't conceive of wanting to plough a lone furrow to make photographs that are nothing more than 'nice pictures' without really challenging myself, and to learn nothing of the history, theory or philosophy of photography, I can understand that that there are people who want nothing more than that from their hobby.

It's easy, that's why. It's reassuring too. If you practice the same skills over and over again, you get very good technically. It;s not quite so easy to come up with original imagery, and it's harder still to develop a unique style that is recognisably yours. So you dismiss all of that as unimportant and fall back into your comfort zone where your peers will congratulate you on your work. Never underestimate the power of positive praise... justified or not.

Trying to turn them from what could be termed 'pleasure photographers' into 'serious photographers' is likely an unwinnable battle.

Maybe. I must admit, if at interview a prospective student can't list a photographer who influences them, or explain why they took any of their images, they are highly unlikely to be granted a place on the course. I'd recommend a HND or Foundation Degree instead as they are more vocational.


Just because their aspirations appear, to you, to be extremely limited doesn't mean that they do not get satisfaction and enjoyment from taking photographs, and from trying to improve their photographs within their own terms of reference.

I'm not suggesting they don't get pleasure from it. I'm just wondering HOW their photographs will improve. Most likely the improvement will be technical in the main, if not in total. That's actually enough for some people, and that's perfectly fine. I have no argument with that. But to suggest that's all you need to if you wish your work to progress on any other level (which some in here are doing) is far less likely.


Where this disparity of approaches to photography stem from is the very simplicity of the medium. No matter how you approach photography all there is to it is; frame, expose, print. (In terms of film, that is. Digitally the last becomes upload I suppose!) The level of thought you put into those three elements is purely a personal choice. As is what you do with the results.

No.. those three steps are the physical steps you go through. If you ask me, it's: Conceive idea, research/decide how you wish to interpret that idea, frame, expose, print. Without those first two steps, you're clearly just walking around with a camera until you see something that for some reason appeals to you... and then you record it. I think most people, even the hobbyists, do at some level preconceive their ideas.

For me it is this simplicity that is the greatest strength of photography. With photography being a (the?) most egalitarian medium I think people should be allowed to pursue it in any way they choose, rather than having one set of values pushed down their throats as The Set Of Values which must be followed.

They aren't values though.. not really. I'm just suggesting that people are not closed minded enough to reject the idea of seeking out new ideas from looking at the great wealth of stuff that's gone before.... and yes, they will be new ideas if you assimilate them into your own work. I'm not suggesting people copy other work.


Most people do not like being told what they ought to do. A more subtle approach to encourage a broadening of outlook might be to make gentle suggestions for work to be viewed, books to be read, in order that enlightenment might be follow.

Well... in my professional capacity, I don't often meet any resistance to new ideas, and on the rare occasions that I do, I'm kind of professionally obliged to bite my tongue and nurture people through it. Eventually though, if they just resist the syllabus of the degree course, they'll have to leave as it's not the course for them. We can't rewrite a course for one person.

This is an internet forum though, and I'm here voluntarily, and (within the rules set down by the forum) can pretty much voice my opinions as I see fit. When an idea I put forward is met with disdain and hostility, then I'm under no obligation to be subtle whatsoever. I'm not actually that bothered if the people reacting badly to what I say believe me or alter their behaviour. What does bother me though is the silent majority who read threads and don't take part. I'm very concerned about them, as I've seen first hand, time and time again how creativity has been effectively and completely killed in beginners by people who have this "Art is just so much BS.. you don't need it to be a photographer" attitude.

Rather than castigate people for not knowing who a photographer is, or not wanting to know, a few links might be in order to challenge people's views of what photography, and art, can be. :)

I've never castigated anyone for merely not knowing anything. I've expressed my surprise several times, but I don't believe I've ever castigated anyone for merely not knowing. People who defend this attitude of "Art is BS" are another matter however.

Seriously... you're posting link sot Keith Arnatt in here to make this point? Where's your subtlety you were referring to? :) If I was trying to wean photographers of the prescriptive by introducing artists they may not have experience, I don't see how having to defend an artist who photographs dog turds, and post-it notes is a great place to start :) I love Keith Arnatt, but he may be too much, too soon for some people.
 
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It has nothing to do with time though. I'm talking about a way of thinking; a mindset, an openness and willingness to learn from other people and enjoy what others do. You could spend 5 minutes a week doing that and it would still be better than simply not wanting to!

Your turn to get it wrong :D
 
Huh? Get what wrong? I was clarifying something you were possibly misunderstanding and I got my own point wrong? Please explain how that works, you've utterly confused me. :thinking:

Ok, you're right in everything and I'm wrong ... probably easier to leave it at that ... this thread is taking too much time now :D
 
It is a shame an interested debate is once again ruined by people getting personal and taking offence. Reminds me why I have been here over a year yet have such a low post count.....:shake:
 
Remind if you would, it seems to have slipped my mind. Who taught Adams his photography? Did he go to university and study it properly?

No.. which is what makes him so unique and important. The rest of us mere mortals are not so fortunate... unless you are suggesting you are the equal of Ansel Adams of course.

You seem to be suggesting that without formal education in photography, creativity is impossible. (To quote you again: Maybe ANY photographic education is not for you. Nothing wrong with that either... just so long as creatively you will not move forward.. only technically...

What's wrong with that? You simply don't need to go to college to learn the technical aspects alone. Some may choose to, and that's fine, but by his own definition, he is at the end of his learning years... his words, not mine.


You.. just want to take photographs. You therefore.. and hear me out... have no great interest in photography. ????

If you fail to understand that, you know less than you think you do.

By what form of logic can you propose that a person wishing to take photographs therefore has no great interest in photography? What is your understanding of the term 'logical fallacy'? If one of your students forwarded such an argument, would you allow it or challenge it?

What.. if they suggested that only having an interest in the physical and mechanical processes involved in image making was missing out so much of the equation that one could debate if it was actually photography at all? No.. I wouldn't challenge that. Such people would be taking photographs.. using photography to do so, but I wouldn't necessarily assume that you have an interest in photography to do so. My mum takes photographs all the time, does it make her a photographer in any sense other than the absolute dictionary definition of the word? If she then started to express an interest in taking better pictures, would that mean she is then a photographer in the sense that we in this forum recognise it?


Umm, perhaps you may like to re-read what you wrote there? What words would you have selected instead of 'little clique of bigots' had you not curbed your excesses in terms of your lack of ability to suffer fools lightly, and since your suspension not been so very careful of other's sensibilities?

I'm struggling to find an alternative word for the same people who constantly get personal, cast my ability as a professional into doubt publicly and continue to keep reminding everyone of my "suspension" in order to do the former, just because they don't like my opinions. I'm sure there IS an alternative word, but they are not worth the effort I'd need to expend in order to think of it.
 
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Robert Capa, Larry Burrows, Tim Page, Sean Flynn, Dickey‑Chapelle, Don McCullin to name a few.
 
Robert Capa, Larry Burrows, Tim Page, Sean Flynn, Dickey‑Chapelle, Don McCullin to name a few.

Yes indeed, spend a few hours looking at their work and a few hours on Flickr groups and tell me which you found more inspiring? (I mean you in the general sense of people here).
 
Robert Capa, Larry Burrows, Tim Page, Sean Flynn, Dickey‑Chapelle, Don McCullin to name a few.

What, or who was that in response to? Use the quote facility!
 
What?! I merely voice an opinion and I get this? Isn't talking about stuff what forums are for? Honestly, I've never seen such a profoundly nonsensical response in any forum.

With the greatest respect, what on Earth are you talking about and why have you just jumped down my throat like that?

I haven't jumped down your throat and if I have offended you I apologise, I simply meant that I've lost interest and give up on this thread now ... it's becoming a chore to keep up with it and that's all ... I hope nobody takes that the wrong way but I've been wrong before.
 
No.. which is what makes him so unique and important. The rest of us mere mortals are not so fortunate... unless you are suggesting you are the equal of Ansel Adams of course.

Hang on...what made Adams unique and important was that he had no formal education. But for anyone else to become creative, they must have a formal education in photography?

Anyway, I'm bored now and have a long weekend ahead taking photographs.





I can understand why you identify with Keith Arnatt.
 
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