Heh...
5 minutes after making my welcome thread, I'm here asking for help.
Very short introduction for who I am and off we go, in hopes that I'll get the help I need.
My name is Nikolas Sideris (my website can be found at my signature) and I'm finishing my PhD in composition next year. I'm working on a piece for Solo Piano for my PhD, and actually in my analysis I could use a bit of knowledge about early photography, the birth of photography, early uses, comparison with painting (art. The obvious), etc...
A bit more specific:
I'm trying to establish that there is a connection between the relationship binding each pair of "general arts":
i. photography - art (visual art, painting)
ii. cinema - theatre (I live in the UK, ok?
)
iii. recorded music - live music
I'm aiming to prove that in rough terms art gave birth to photography. That early uses of photography (first uses at least), were pretty much aimed to "replace" if you want painting, in creating the perfect picture (perfect icon of the real world).
Samewise my guess is (which I've still to research on) that film (cinema) was firstly used in late 19th century or very early 20th, as no more than a variation of theatre. That, lacking all technological advances, maybe even montage, it was nothing more than visualisation of things that could be seen in the theatre (ok, a bit too much, but I hope you get what I mean).
With music this applies already: In classical music, any recorded music (apart from electronic, which I will talk about later) is in fact a faithful, as much as possible (digital or analogue) of a live performance. Nothing more. In electronic music, it's not a capture of a live performance, but never the less the idea of being able to performe it live, still remains.
And before you flame me with the above silly comparisons, let me clarify that over the past 100+ years photography and cinema have evolved into independant arts, rightfully imho (and probably everyone elses as well (<-only a reservationist would like to NOT call photography an art), and this has happened mainly through the use of technology. So whilst the dependence with the "mother art" (theatre and painting) has been lost, there is no the dependance in technology, which does not appear in the "mother arts".
On the contrary in music this does not apply. Recorded music is NOT considered a new, different art. It still depends on the "mother art" (live performance), in order to produce a good result (so that star performers ARE born and made, and created and nurtured) and the dependency in technology ends to the faithful capture of the live sound.
____________
This is a photography forum! You have guessed it that I want to concetrate in photography in this case.
How do you feel about the comparison (early) photography vs art (painting)? Is it fair to say that the two are connected? And that over the years they grew apart, through the use of new tehniques in photography? That photography is no longer the art of the faithful reproduction of the visual, but rather a creative output of the photographer, through analogue (camera lens, shatters, etc) or digital (PS) means?
Apart from the discussion which this will probably spring:
Is there any bibliography you would recomend me about the comparison of photography - art? Any ideas on where to get them (the university library should have it, but still, links are always better). Anything else to comment?
Thank you for your time reading this mamoth second post. Hope it will create a bit of discussion.
5 minutes after making my welcome thread, I'm here asking for help.
Very short introduction for who I am and off we go, in hopes that I'll get the help I need.
My name is Nikolas Sideris (my website can be found at my signature) and I'm finishing my PhD in composition next year. I'm working on a piece for Solo Piano for my PhD, and actually in my analysis I could use a bit of knowledge about early photography, the birth of photography, early uses, comparison with painting (art. The obvious), etc...
A bit more specific:
I'm trying to establish that there is a connection between the relationship binding each pair of "general arts":
i. photography - art (visual art, painting)
ii. cinema - theatre (I live in the UK, ok?
iii. recorded music - live music
I'm aiming to prove that in rough terms art gave birth to photography. That early uses of photography (first uses at least), were pretty much aimed to "replace" if you want painting, in creating the perfect picture (perfect icon of the real world).
Samewise my guess is (which I've still to research on) that film (cinema) was firstly used in late 19th century or very early 20th, as no more than a variation of theatre. That, lacking all technological advances, maybe even montage, it was nothing more than visualisation of things that could be seen in the theatre (ok, a bit too much, but I hope you get what I mean).
With music this applies already: In classical music, any recorded music (apart from electronic, which I will talk about later) is in fact a faithful, as much as possible (digital or analogue) of a live performance. Nothing more. In electronic music, it's not a capture of a live performance, but never the less the idea of being able to performe it live, still remains.
And before you flame me with the above silly comparisons, let me clarify that over the past 100+ years photography and cinema have evolved into independant arts, rightfully imho (and probably everyone elses as well (<-only a reservationist would like to NOT call photography an art), and this has happened mainly through the use of technology. So whilst the dependence with the "mother art" (theatre and painting) has been lost, there is no the dependance in technology, which does not appear in the "mother arts".
On the contrary in music this does not apply. Recorded music is NOT considered a new, different art. It still depends on the "mother art" (live performance), in order to produce a good result (so that star performers ARE born and made, and created and nurtured) and the dependency in technology ends to the faithful capture of the live sound.
____________
This is a photography forum! You have guessed it that I want to concetrate in photography in this case.
How do you feel about the comparison (early) photography vs art (painting)? Is it fair to say that the two are connected? And that over the years they grew apart, through the use of new tehniques in photography? That photography is no longer the art of the faithful reproduction of the visual, but rather a creative output of the photographer, through analogue (camera lens, shatters, etc) or digital (PS) means?
Apart from the discussion which this will probably spring:
Is there any bibliography you would recomend me about the comparison of photography - art? Any ideas on where to get them (the university library should have it, but still, links are always better). Anything else to comment?
Thank you for your time reading this mamoth second post. Hope it will create a bit of discussion.
