I don't really think it's important when in the process he felt whatever emotions he had, I don't even think it's always important to know what those emotions were because to me it's more often about how a piece of art makes you feel rather than how it made the artist feel, that's why art is such a personal thing. I'm not a believer art has to have some profound and obvious message; there's only one thing I want from any piece of art be it a poem, painting, photo, piece of music or anything else, and that's purely that I want it to make me feel something. I'm not a kid in some school art class so I don't feel the need to explain or justify (or even analyse) those emotions and I don't always even know what a piece of art is saying, but I don't think you always need to. Some art has an instant profound effect on me (ranging from an immediate feeling of elation to an extreme sense of sadness), some opens my mind to think more about certain things; I don't even know what I feel from some art but it does something to grab my attention and captivate me. Art that typically has such an effect on me has strong emotional and personal content and for that to be the case it has to be fairly unique, i.e. not a carbon copy of what the majority of other people are doing. The vast majority of commercial music these days is extremely formulaic and really rather dull; nothing really stands out because the majority of producers are working to a very similar 'radio-friendly' formula in the hope of getting onto playlists - the more that happens the less personal the music becomes and the less meaning it has. Photography is essentially the same, that perfectly technically correct rule-of-thirds landscape composition with overcooked HDR style and the saturation cranked up has become the popular thing that the majority of people think gets views, so that's what they do. It's less to do with taking a photo for your own reasons and more driven by working to someone else's formula - a perfect example of work I feel absolutely nothing from when I view it. You summed up my problem with most landscape photography in your first sentence of that reply - landscape photographers have a choice of styles to try emulate. As long as you're trying to make your work look like someone else's you don't stand a chance in hell of producing anything that's personal to you with your own emotional content.