There's such a thing creative accountancy... which I'm sure you are aware ofAre creative accountants born?
We'll have no mischief here, this is a serious forum for serious people!
Steve.
can you really get a degree in photography?
Can you teach camera-craft? - Yes
Is camera-craft needed? Inferred answer - No.
Then we get the spurious argument/discussion/analogy of Range Rovers and Mercedes --- I'm truly lost and confused.
I'd defy anybody with a mega-bugs, point-and-shoot, state of the art pile of kit to capture the necessary prop-blur of an aerobatic display of modern aerobatic aircraft to the point that it's both technically accurate and have artistic merit. Especially without BOTH an advanced level of camera-craft and an appreciation of the Decisive Moment!
To say otherwise is tantamount to absolute tosh!
You can even get one in accountancy... and that's really just adding up and taking away!!
Steve.
It's easy. Which is my point. Why is so much importance placed on something to easy?
But pictures of piston aircraft at airshows HAVE no artistic merit. They may have technical requirements, but artistic merit? What artistic merit do they have?
As for technical skill.... it's called shutter priority![]()
Yeah, I do that... not because of your reply though.I see you've edited this since I replied![]()
But pictures of piston aircraft at airshows HAVE no artistic merit. They may have technical requirements, but artistic merit? What artistic merit do they have?
As for technical skill.... it's called shutter priorityAll you need to do is work out what shutter speed you need, which can be done trial and error... and after an hour or so, you've got it. hardly demanding. I've only ever shot one air show, and I had that nailed in 10 minutes.
I wish - small bird images are NOT easy
no.. it required knowledge of the species and habitat... patience, and the right gear. I'm not saying it's easy.. I'm saying photographically it's pretty easy, and ultimately, luck has as much to do with it as anything else.
You've never met a true 'airhead' have you?
Art and beauty is in the eye of the beholder. I've met people who don't like Van Gogh's "Rest from Work" because it's not patch on his "Sunflowers"
10 minutes - what took you so long? With education, and photographic experience you could've achieved it in 1 minute!
I'm as bad as anybody - but it would be great to get this thread into some kind of constructive, balanced debate that is useful to all ......... I know that's "rich" coming from me ....... but most of my posts do start out with an element of "jest" - I know that I do not use "smilies" but that's me, I just don't understand them........... I'll always throw in what is judged to be the odd "dig" - but I'll now chose a funny face thing when I do
Clear simple language would be good ........ try to educate, step by step
Patience ---- that'll be the Decisive Moment thing then!
I'm a great fan of all that modern digital technology has brought to photography. It's what brought me back to photography as a hobby after giving up on film, which I developed and printed myself, because it became too expensive and time consuming.
There are two aspects of camera craft in which I'm notably deficient. The first is with catching those unexpected transient photo opportunities that I miss so many of. I'm learning habits of having the camera very quickly accessible and in a good general purpose mode. The second is getting depth of focus right with portraits of still subjects such as flowers. I usually want a nicely blurred background and as much of the flower as possible in very sharp focus. My guesses about aperture are heading the right direction but often wrong. I need to spend much longer with the camera on a tripod doing DoF previews and chimpings.
Those are far from the only deficiencies in my camera craft. I mention them because both of them involve me learning new skills in taking the shot, in preparing for the shot, and in post processing. They both involve me exploiting the latest camera technology, deciding on and acquiring new accessories and learning how to get the best from them, and learning new post processing skills.
In other words, my hopefully improving camera craft involves all the latest gear I can afford to get my hands on, combined with experimenting, learning, devloping skills, etc..
As a photographer, no one, ever, has asked to see a piece of paper.
Simple really. Yes, camera craft can be taught.. of course it can. However, it's the easiest part of photography, and one becoming less relevant year on year as cameras become more sophisticated. Auto focus is almost perfect for most uses, meters are clever and able to expose accurately in scenarios that would have fooled systems from 20 years ago.
Does all that make your images more interesting?
As an electronic and mechanical design engineer, no one has ever seen any of my qualifications either. And I only have O and A levels. I was offered a degree place but decided that it wasn't relevant to what I wanted to do.
Steve.
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, of course, but you are making the mistake that art=beauty, so finding something beautiful means you've found art.
You mention people "liking" things. What has "like" got to do with art?
So if it only takes one minute.... where's the skill? That's my point. It takes one minute if someone had the benefit of being told what speeds to use for what point of the display. It takes longer than one minute though... as there's then other things to work out. Fixed pitch prop or not?
At the end of the day... there's no artistic merit in airshow images. They're a record. They can look impressive, and if you like planes... sure, they're enjoyable to look at, but they have no artistic merit.
As an electronic and mechanical design engineer, no one has ever seen any of my qualifications either. And I only have O and A levels. I was offered a degree place but decided that it wasn't relevant to what I wanted to do.
Whilst what you say is entirely correct, If I could only use modern auto everything cameras, I don't think I would bother with photography as it would have no interest for me. I prefer to manual focus and expose then develop the film and print without a computer involved. I even make cameras sometimes.
I can appreciate that these things are useful for professionals and Mr and Mrs Joe Average alike... but they're not for me.
Steve.
No.. because no one who takes "bif" images will fire off one shot only.
Like has EVERYTHING to do with Art!
My wife prefers to walk through a gallery by herself, immersing herself in her own experience and personal enjoyment of the Art. It's an arrogance to inflict my opinion (or anybody else's) on her individual connection with the artist. I very much respect that. Educators would do well to include that in their diatribes when forcing ideas and notions upon students.
I minute was with respect to you.... everybody else it takes longer!
I do... and I have the Metadata to prove it!
the best thing about most Art Galleries is leaving - the last I went to was David Hockney Exhibition - I walked out after 10 minutes ....... i took a few images of the outside which were OK, so all was not lost
That's because for you it's about materiality, which is one aspect of the artefact that in itself can give it artistic merit.
I struggled with the Picaso Museum in Barcelona, but the Musee d'Orsay had me spell-bound - I was disappointed when it closed.
Possibly. However, there is a proportion of photographers, especially amongst the grey bearded, large format types, to substitute method for artistic value.
Using an old process on a fully manual camera and spending a lot of time setting up doesn't mean that the resulting image is going to be better than that of someone passing by who snaps it on their i-phone in two seconds.
Steve.
Nah.... there's tons of stuff I like that's not art, and tons of stuff I dislike immensely but have to acknowledge it's artistic brilliance. I'm not saying anyone is WRONG for going to a gallery and just liking what they see. Art is to be enjoyed, but at an aesthetic level, those who go along to merely enjoy looking at art are only really looking at the surface, the craft, and reacting to it visually, not intellectually. I'm not saying that's wrong, but LIKING something doesn't make it art.
I don;t force anything upon students Barry. What makes you think I do? I would make it clear to students however that whether you LIKE something is utterly irrelevant That's not forcing an opinion, it IS educating them about art. FORCING my opinion would be me telling them WHAT to like. You're making the mistake of thinking I'm here in this forum as an educator.
I must be a slow learner thenEither way... you get my point.
Isn't that just adhering to a way of working that's not relevant, and doing so for no reason though? Wouldn't your chances of getting the shot increase exponentially if you used a fast continuous way of shooting? Doesn't anyone appreciate the image more because you took only one shot? If so, what are they admiring, the image, or you? If THAT'S the case, which is more important to you?
Personally I'd just do what gives me the best chance of getting the shot I require.
? I think you'll need to explain that one.
Wouldn't surprise me if someone's doing that there, but what's that got to do with me? However, have you seen the graduate work we "churn out"? Clearly you haven't.
Who cares about Gursky or Lik though.. especially Lik. I'm talking about every other artist out there who earns a living from what they do. Every industry will have it's celebrities who just happen to become a marketable commodity. Would you describe all writers as talentless hacks just because E.L James is so terrible, yet so popular? The fact is, you don't know what you're talking about. You have an opinion. You can't seriously hold Gursky up as representative of a typical artist... not if you want to be taken completely seriously. He's a celebrity. All fields have their celebrity, and it doesn't necessarily follow that they are the best at what they do. Is E.L James a good example of the best writing available at the moment? Is all writing a cynical attempt to make money from celebrity because one of the worst books ever written has made a fortune? Happily... Gursky is at least talented, unlike that idiot who wrote 50 shades... which, if you read it, you'd realise is probably the worst book ever written. I don't hear you accusing the publishing industry of making money out of idiots. Or TV, or the Movie industry... or even non-lens based art... but photography? Sure.... that's just selling crap to idiots. Hmmm... Sounds like sour grapes to me.
Your problem though, is you actually have no idea what you're talking about.
Whether you like it or not.... camera skills are not what makes a great image. Camera skills are quickly becoming redundant. I reckon in 10 years, the only hard skills you'll still need are lighting skills, as that's the only thing impossible to automate.
Anyone who relies on "camera" skills at the moment, will therefore become redundant themselves as more and more of us can achieve the same results without them.
I can't imagine your opinions differ much from what you've proffered on this, or other, forum! Forcing an opinion to like something is just the same as suggesting/forcing what not to like! Same result, different logic.
Surely, in a Gallery at least, objects exists as Art, therefore it is there to be liked or disliked - the two are inextricably linked. The connection, be it esoteric, academic or intellectual is immaterial - it is an object that the Artist has exhibited over which to opine or simply enjoyed.
No one is saying you're here as an Educator to these fine boards but you can't escape your background.
All you seem to have done is confirm my original premise - camera-craft is disappearing (good or bad). Many of the opinions of others have also confirmed this to me.
You were the one who brought Gursky up as an example of an artist not me.
Market effectively and create false value and you could sell a messy, unmade bed. Creative industries can sell almost anything if they get gullible enough people to buy into the Emperor's New Clothes.
Yeah, but Steve, some of us still like to drive the old cars, oil leaks and all, don't we? Camera craft will not be totally dead for a long time.Camera craft is disappearing generally. I think the point David is making is that for most purposes, that doesn't really matter.
It's a bit like being able to drive a modern automatic car without needing to know how gearboxes, clutches, automatic chokes, etc. work.
Steve.