Bill Burk
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- Feb 9, 2010
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As blansky pointed out in the critique thread, there are many genres of photography and each has its rules.
For purpose of illustration, a genre I like to illustrate is the Group f.64 straight photography. The rules of that genre allow retouching spots but not removing objects and adding skies.
Pictorialism not only allows but explicitly encourages dramatic changes, adding and removing objects as needed to get rid of the superfluous. I might see the value in an occasional excursion into playing with the skies and water to remove distractions. I'd tell the story and explain to my audience that I am playing in another genre for that picture. An example is William Mortensen's print in Print Finishing "The Conference" (ducks wading in a shallow creek - where he cleaned up lots of rocks and dirt-clods with abrasion tone).
And even APUG might be considered a genre with different rules. I have a photo that I uploaded to the gallery on DPUG because it was "impossible" for me to print by analog methods. It was a great picture of my friends, but the roll of film had air bells. I had to scan the negative and use the healing brush in Photoshop to clean up the air bells. I just don't know how I would do that on a 35mm negative by pure analog methods.
For purpose of illustration, a genre I like to illustrate is the Group f.64 straight photography. The rules of that genre allow retouching spots but not removing objects and adding skies.
Pictorialism not only allows but explicitly encourages dramatic changes, adding and removing objects as needed to get rid of the superfluous. I might see the value in an occasional excursion into playing with the skies and water to remove distractions. I'd tell the story and explain to my audience that I am playing in another genre for that picture. An example is William Mortensen's print in Print Finishing "The Conference" (ducks wading in a shallow creek - where he cleaned up lots of rocks and dirt-clods with abrasion tone).
And even APUG might be considered a genre with different rules. I have a photo that I uploaded to the gallery on DPUG because it was "impossible" for me to print by analog methods. It was a great picture of my friends, but the roll of film had air bells. I had to scan the negative and use the healing brush in Photoshop to clean up the air bells. I just don't know how I would do that on a 35mm negative by pure analog methods.