Alan Edward Klein
Member
That's what I do with my landscapes. Just trying to capture something that caught my eye. The only thinking is how to execute the shot right. We'll have to let them swim at the other end of the pool.I agree with the bulk of what you wrote above, but depart when it comes to artwork which is intentionally banal and only gains meaning once you learn the intent behind the work.
Like I keep saying, there's room in the pool for everyone. I prefer art which speaks for itself without having to join a club to get the decoder ring.
In Shore's words from the article:
"The second approach entailed the idea of the snapshot. Snapshots, too, have their own visual conventions, but sometimes they feel like an unmediated experience. That’s what I was after. I made the snapshots with the Mick-A-Matic, and that led to “American Surfaces,” taken with a 35-mm. point-and-shoot. While working on this series, I engaged in a mental exercise. At random times during the day, I took “screenshots” of my field of vision. I wanted to make a conscious mental record of what seeing looked like. And I based my pictures on this.
This practice not only informed how I photographed but what I photographed. Since I was choosing random moments, I found I was looking at situations that were not usually the subject of photographs: riding in a taxi, standing in an elevator, eating a meal, watching television. This led me to go beyond conventions not only of pictorial structure but of content, too."
There are as many ways to photograph as there are photographers, and this is equally valid as any other, but it and the resultant images don't resonate with me. Having a decoder ring and knowing why it was taken doesn't change the way I see it. Guess I'm just not good herd member material...knowing why it was made doesn't change the way I see it.
I choose to walk, typically through Nature, and wait until a particular place or thing stops me. I'll move around until the strongest vantage point is found which accentuates what stopped me, then decide on the best way to arrive at a print which accentuates it even more. I want the photograph to speak for itself. A diametrically opposed aesthetic.
Shore can happily splash away in his end of the pool and I'll splash away in mine. I've previously stated I can see what he's doing and have tipped my hat his way for achieving it, but it just doesn't float my boat.


