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Alleged abstract photos are tiresome......wrong medium, too easy.
its too bad people on this website make it a point to divide the membership instead of finding commonality
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Alleged abstract photos are tiresome......wrong medium, too easy.
Thanks for sharing this excellent thought. I wonder if -- on some level -- many photos with a strong emotional response somehow contain this line, really or metaphorically.
No it isn't.
Yes. Images that "contain" BOTH literal representation and "metaphor" ... and questions, indecision...seem to me to be the essence of juicy photographs: like the discoveries that Zen Buddhists and other meditative folks realize when they bring discipline to awareness/perception.
Much like vintage "modern jazz" , which states a tune then explores something else from that point of reference, then returns occasionally to remind us of what's underway.
No, I tend to limit titles/descriptions to place and date and media (Carbon Print, Platinum Print, etc) and do not include whatever 'school' or branch or type of art I am using (such as 'abstract"). Usually if one of my images has a more involved title, the title and the image evolved together -- see below: "Mistaking the Map for the Territory". In this case, I feel the title and the photograph are one piece. Silver Gelatin Print from 4x5 negative.Vaughn...do you LABEL your prints "abstract" ?
its too bad people on this website make it a point to divide the membership instead of finding commonality
Amen brother! It's a disease that's infected much of our society these days.+1
Folks consistently with such a habit should be ignored, but unfortunately there are still too many people feeding threads designed to satisfy ego's like this.
No, I tend to limit titles/descriptions to place and date and media (Carbon Print, Platinum Print, etc) and do not include whatever 'school' or branch or type of art I am using (such as 'abstract"). Usually if one of my images has a more involved title, the title and the image evolved together -- see below: "Mistaking the Map for the Territory". In this case, I feel the title and the photograph are one piece. Silver Gelatin Print from 4x5 negative.
However, if you meant do I CALL any of my images I have shown in these posts abstracts, then yes and no. If I was discussing one of them, the discussion could easily come around to the influence of abstract art. For example, with the image of the branches at Dry Falls I hope the viewer coming to it with a fresh mind will be able to make the jump from photo-reality...past the branches...to feeling the heat and intensity of the moment...or to whatever echoes from within the viewer. I like the way the image suggests a mirror image, how the tonalities of the ground (sunlit dry grass) and the "sky" (black lava cliff face in shadow) are reversed, and by cropping in close, how the branches extend forever; helping the viewer to make the jump. So while I do not label it abstract, I would have to say that on one level I want the viewer to treat it as one.
Some interesting reading on equivilence and abstract photography by Minor White:
http://www.jnevins.com/whitereading.htm
For me the way Georgia O'Keeffe discusses abstraction is highly relevant to photography. For her she abstracted elements from the object she was painting. Her abstractions ran the gamut of appearing somewhat realistic to not realistic at all. She also related how she was influenced by photographers and how they cropped images - a clear for of abstraction.I shot this in 2015. Abstract or not?
For me the way Georgia O'Keeffe discusses abstraction is highly relevant to photography. For her she abstracted elements from the object she was painting. Her abstractions ran the gamut of appearing somewhat realistic to not realistic at all. She also related how she was influenced by photographers and how they cropped images - a clear for of abstraction.
Critics of her time accused her of painting nothing more than wall decorations. Hmmm... I don't hold with that interpretation at all.
For me the way Georgia O'Keeffe discusses abstraction is highly relevant to photography. For her she abstracted elements from the object she was painting. Her abstractions ran the gamut of appearing somewhat realistic to not realistic at all. She also related how she was influenced by photographers and how they cropped images - a clear for of abstraction.
Critics of her time accused her of painting nothing more than wall decorations. Hmmm... I don't hold with that interpretation at all.
LOL... reviews were
done via a "troll farm" ..

I haven't read all the posts so if this is repeating -sorry. Henry Holmes Smith made images with photographic materials not using a camera. Are those considered photographs as they are certainly abstract? We have one hanging on a wall along side very literal photographs by other well known photographers.
http://www.jeffreyglasser.com/
..For me the way Georgia O'Keeffe discusses abstraction is highly relevant to photography. For her she abstracted elements from the object she was painting. Her abstractions ran the gamut of appearing somewhat realistic to not realistic at all. She also related how she was influenced by photographers and how they cropped images - a clear for of abstraction.
Critics of her time accused her of painting nothing more than wall decorations. Hmmm... I don't hold with that interpretation at all.
Some right here on Photrio are negative about Picasso.
how does it NOT relate to someone ignoring conventions &cHow does that relate to allegedly "abstract" photographs?
I think I remember some member saying he didn't like Picasso. Maybe even in this thread. Not sure why that matters, or even what the point is.please share links to these negative comments about picasso.
how does it NOT relate to someone ignoring conventions &c
its just like the way people are dismissive of tichy and nadar and plenty of others ...
I think I remember some member saying he didn't like Picasso. Maybe even in this thread. Not sure why that matters, or even what the point is.
I think I remember some member saying he didn't like Picasso. Maybe even in this thread. Not sure why that matters, or even what the point is.
I think that is just storing up goodwill for when they post.The point might be that ignorance is, for some people, bliss...it explains "likes" for every mediocre snapshot.
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