Yup. Just about everything of quality has been drowned out by loud mediocrity. Fewer and fewer know the difference.
I've posted a few photos and some comments completely missed the subject matter, so to me comments don't really mean much.
If someone looks at a photos, get a bit of enjoyment from it yet says nothing, I'm happy.
Agreed. Besides time and effort, it takes some experience, education (self and/or formal), and thought to pull the most out of someone's print. For me that means that a print (or collection of prints) can have layers...a story line, a visual balance, a love of light, visual movement, a message, symbolism, and so forth, all working together. Most people do not wish to spend the time and effort needed to dig deeper or do not have the tools to make digging enjoyable.
One of my goals is to have a framed print of the wall that will work for all levels of viewers...those who like looking at pretty pictures to those who study the piece. Sometimes it is as simple as having a small detail in the image to reward those who spend the time looking at the work. Perhaps I can sucker someone into spending more time looking and spinning the mental and/or emotional wheels.
Who's to define what's mediocre? What if it's the first roll of film someone has ever exposed and they are happy to get anything out of it? It has value to them, no matter how commonplace the subject matter is.That is all well and nice. However, my original rant was about folks who seem to have no clue as to how mediocre or even poor the images are that they post,
That is all well and nice. However, my original rant was about folks who seem to have no clue as to how mediocre or even poor the images are that they post, with a possible limited interest to only their immediate circle of friends and family. Or just in bad taste in some instances.
Who's to define what's mediocre? What if it's the first roll of film someone has ever exposed and they are happy to get anything out of it? It has value to them, no matter how commonplace the subject matter is.
People take photos for many reasons, it's not for others to judge why. One persons masterpiece is another persons crap, and much of that is a value judgement unique to the viewer alone.
Such people may feel exactly the same about so-called "high art" or abstract photographs. Everyone has their own idea of what they find satisfying in this context.
And, as Robert Heinlein so trenchantly observed, Never try to teach a pig to sing; it wastes your time and it annoys the pig. It's not always self evident who is the pig and who is the teacher ...
I have no problem with that. No one is expecting masterpieces. But maybe a bit of self-refletction and critical judgment before posting for the public. As I mentioned in the first post, most of this I see on other photo forums where the participants are not beginners, they are using quite expensive and sophisticated cameras, many involving a fair amount of technical ability. That, unfortunately is not enough. One can produce crap at any level, just maybe don't put it online.
Examples, examples, examples, please.
I shoot a lot of abstracts. The photographers and artists of my direct acquaintance seem to enjoy at least some of them. Non-photographers divide about evenly on whether or not they'll even spend time with the image. Since I work for myself, and only myself, I just don't care, certainly enough to try and "correct" the "wrong" opinion ...
But you're not posting for public consumption and that is up to you. I don't understand why there are some who seem their images fit to post when they are banal or even bad, or in poor taste (without poor taste being intentionally the objective). I go back to "everyone gets a trophy"--no one would dare to judge my work, just the fact that I have produced something is worthy of reward, respect and praise. If it pleases the maker, wonderful! But maybe a closer, more critical look before sharing.
I do post publicly here and elsewhere to get feedback from other capable photographers. I just don't expect to have to make everyone happy.
No one is expecting to make everyone or even anyone happy. What I don't fathom is why the poster is pleased with the work enough to share it. Let's cut to the chase--some work is pitiful (and I don't mean technically deficient) or unintentionally cliché/kitschy and would be best kept to oneself.
Who gets to decide what's "good enough" to post? The whole point of fora like Photrio et al is to have an open exchange of ideas and images. That marketplace makes us all better even if you don't like every single thing you see.
You also have to consider that there is a very wide range of experience represented in places like this. I have been seriously photographing for 50-ish years on- and off. What I thought was "good" five decades ago, makes me wince today. But if we insist on some magical threshold that must be met in order to post, we will exclude people early on in their photographic journey. They don't need muting, they need encouragement ...
People can post whatever they want, just trying to understand the why.
That is all well and nice. However, my original rant was about folks who seem to have no clue as to how mediocre or even poor the images are that they post, with a possible limited interest to only their immediate circle of friends and family. Or just in bad taste in some instances.
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