I am in my mid 40's but somehow I still remember how "important" photography used to be in every day culture.
I remember my parents dressing me up to get on Sunday to the local photographer studio, this was already a "sacred" and important thing, more than the snapshots of today.
I also remember toying with the film camera in our family holidays and my parents telling me not to "waste" photos without subjects because film costs, imagine saying that to a modern kid that can literally take hundreds of photos in less than 2 minutes.
And of course I remember the anticipation of printing them and then filling up photo albums with memories (although I never learn myself how to print).
Perhaps this is why the old school photography is that good. Because the early and enthusiastic practitioners loved it and the world loved looking at photographs too.
You mentioned LIFE magazine. It never tried to pretend it is an art photography magazine but looking at these photos by today's standards they are so damn good. Even when they did not intend to produce art photography they did produce very nice, honest, and tender photos!
The culture of today is very different. The plurality of the photos everywhere is overwhelming. The connection with time and memory seems to fade. Who looks at photos anymore? Who buys Photo Books? Most take photos and keep them in their folders for never to be viewed again. Even the view has changed, it is instantaneous, you consume them, and then it is gone. While photography needs to be looked at again and again, and come back to them, like a good poem.
You are right about what you wrote. And we all need to reassess I think what photography means to us nowadays.
When you look at a picture of someone you love, you fall in love all over again.
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