Larry Bullis
Subscriber
Nothing is real; nothing to write home about.
It seems to me that the issue is one of convention, not of veracity.
In times past, we might see an image such as would be found in Life magazine, and we'd know what it was. We would accept it as a document that had a certain relationship to something we could accept as true, even if it wasn't really true. We could place it in our mind. Likewise, we could see an ab-ex painting, say a Franz Kline, and we (well, some of us) could accept that as what it is. Each of these represents a convention and we see them within a framework that belongs to the convention that our mind places them within.
Work would appear that might require us to flounder a bit while we attempt to construct a new framework for something we hadn't seen. Remember the first time you saw one of Jerry Uelsmann's images?
Where we have difficulty and may feel a need to simplify these days is in the confusion of conventions; that we can't be sure that an image is this or is that. No longer can we take anything for granted. I think lots of people have big trouble with that. Certainty seems to be important; more important for some than for others. Some people really get mad about this, and find digital imaging absolutely immoral (I heard an interview with Elliott Erwitt where he expressed this) while others find it exciting because of the new possibilities that it offers. For someone like Erwitt, photography is photography as he does it, and there isn't any room for deviation beyond a certain point. For him, that horizon is pretty close.
The term "fauxtography" essentially reduces the vast multiplicity of possibilities we have in imaging today to a dualistic formula, true or false. It doesn't account for the fact that no image is "true" in that a picture of a hamburger is not a hamburger. Nor does it take into account the other side, that every image is real, a real image - real as just what it is.
It seems to me that attempting to draw a line at any point is simply to move the breaking point between black and white, like exposing a kodalith from a continuous tone negative more or less. It's a very limiting view, and one that probably tends to impoverish the spirit.
It seems to me that the issue is one of convention, not of veracity.
In times past, we might see an image such as would be found in Life magazine, and we'd know what it was. We would accept it as a document that had a certain relationship to something we could accept as true, even if it wasn't really true. We could place it in our mind. Likewise, we could see an ab-ex painting, say a Franz Kline, and we (well, some of us) could accept that as what it is. Each of these represents a convention and we see them within a framework that belongs to the convention that our mind places them within.
Work would appear that might require us to flounder a bit while we attempt to construct a new framework for something we hadn't seen. Remember the first time you saw one of Jerry Uelsmann's images?
Where we have difficulty and may feel a need to simplify these days is in the confusion of conventions; that we can't be sure that an image is this or is that. No longer can we take anything for granted. I think lots of people have big trouble with that. Certainty seems to be important; more important for some than for others. Some people really get mad about this, and find digital imaging absolutely immoral (I heard an interview with Elliott Erwitt where he expressed this) while others find it exciting because of the new possibilities that it offers. For someone like Erwitt, photography is photography as he does it, and there isn't any room for deviation beyond a certain point. For him, that horizon is pretty close.
The term "fauxtography" essentially reduces the vast multiplicity of possibilities we have in imaging today to a dualistic formula, true or false. It doesn't account for the fact that no image is "true" in that a picture of a hamburger is not a hamburger. Nor does it take into account the other side, that every image is real, a real image - real as just what it is.
It seems to me that attempting to draw a line at any point is simply to move the breaking point between black and white, like exposing a kodalith from a continuous tone negative more or less. It's a very limiting view, and one that probably tends to impoverish the spirit.