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Well don't say these things if they don't make sense will ya...making me feel all stupid like.
:shrug:
I guess we can see fine art in two ways, one its a kind of brief title for introduction and/or explanation of an artists serious intentions within a body of work, and two its a label attached to fake this intention... usually for profit.
Well don't say these things if they don't make sense will ya...making me feel all stupid like.![]()
POAH said:
its the same poncy nonsense that surrounds fine art or glicee. made up sentances to try and make it sound better than it actually is
fine art more often than not is a pair of boobs in a landscape shot printed in B&W. there is nothing fine or art about it :|
OK. Comment withdrawn![]()
Simon photo said:I visited the hereford photography festival last year and while there were some amazing exhibits, there were also some not so good exhibits, the not so good work almost always had a description flooded with words grabbed from a thesaurus in a vain attempt to justify work that was under par. These collections of work weren't very transparent, they needed the deep and meaningful descriptions to make them fluent. The better work was totally fluent, spoke volumes and made me really think about the work in question, the person who created it and what they were trying to achieve.
Don't get me wrong, i love challenging art, be it photography, painted whatever, but as soon as the creator beats about the bush and tries to draw upon associations between this and that, and it isn't exactly clear then i swiftly walk by.

Joenail said:The photographs that I consider art aren't really photographs in a conventional sense of the word, they are something which has been created.
I think the sort of photographers that would have been classed Fine Art, such as Sherman, Gursky and Dikstra, etc
TBH I would class them as crap lol nothing fine or arty about anything I can find on google of those three.
TBH I would class them as crap lol nothing fine or arty about anything I can find on google of those three.
Why?![]()
I asked the same question on `shutterfinger` blog, heres the response Gordon gave :
Here is Alain Briots 14-point checklist from Marketing Fine Art Photography:
1:Fine art photography is first about the artist.
2:The photographer must consider himself an artist.
3:The artist must demonstrate control of the creative process and final outcome.
4:A fine art photograph is done with the goal of creating a work of art.
5:A fine art photograph is not just documentary.
6:The image represents an interpretation of the subject.
7:A fine art photograph has an emotional content.
8:The composition is complex and sophisticated.
9:A metaphorical level of meaning is present in the image.
10:The emphasis is on quality instead of quantity.
11:Cost considerations are secondary.
12:The artist wrote an artist statement.
13:Individual pieces are part of a larger body of work.
14:The work is discussed in relationship to other works of art.
Briot provides a full explanation of each one in the book. Quibblers might take issue with one or two, but on the whole Briots list presents a clear picture (pardon the expression) of whats required.
My personal opinion is that fine art photography is as much a marketing term as anything else. Its a label you (the photographer) apply to your work when you want to sell it to people who value the visual appeal of a photographic print as much as the image itself. I have to admit that as marketing terms go, the difference between art photography and fine art photography escapes me.
Keep in mind that people who buy (fine) art photographs normally intend to frame and display them. If they spend several hundred dollars for a print plus matting and framing, they want their friends, family and associates to believe said photo has artistic merit. This is where credentials such as artist statements, gallery show credits, art school degrees, and bodies of work come in handy. If the work itself strains artistic credibility, credentials help to reinforce the seriousness of the artist (if not the art).
To summarize, my position is that you can call your photographs whatever you like among family and friends, including fine art. If, however, you plan to sell them as such, your work will most likely be held to artistic standards such as the ones Briot has listed. You dont have to agree with them; you can even ignore some of them; but to ignore all of them is to render your work unmarketable as art photography.
I think Klute has hit the nail on the head in what Fine Art Photography used to be however I also agree in a way with POAH that the term 'Fine Art' is now applied to a lot of the "Black&White Nudes in the Forest" type of photography, there are a few local photographers I know who class colour selection as fine art.
I think the sort of photographers that would have been classed Fine Art, such as Sherman, Gursky and Dikstra...
TBH I would class them as crap lol nothing fine or arty about anything I can find on google of those three.
Why?![]()
Poah's image critique posts seem to be limited to the nude/glamour section of the forum and while I'm unfamiliar with Dikstra I don't think Gursky or Sherman's images tend to feature boobs, bums or diffuse glow.![]()

How can anyone get even the nearest grasp on what said photographers put into their art by typing their name into Google image search! Sure you will see the most talked about, re posted and linked images but come on! I watched a documentary on crewdson not long ago and was oblivious to his working methods but now i have seen his workflow and mindset i consider him to be a true artist.
So what exactly is fine art photography? Take my profile image[/IMG]what category would it fall into? I would be interested to know peoples views, its not documenting anything, it has a meaning, to myself, it may not be obvious to everyone, i don't tend to pigeon hole my images other than the obvious categories.![]()