Who cares what it is?
The point of it all is the Image!
Yes, yes, yes, you nailed it!
Who cares what it is?
The point of it all is the Image!
Is cropping a photo a lying?
Yes, it is a lie of omission.
Does that matter?
It depends...
I though it was a lie of emulsion.
Steve
I'd say both images are truthful.
http://www.pdnpulse.com/2009/09/david-hume-kennerly-accuses-newsweek-of-photo-fakery.html
Kennerly's image says that Cheney is a paterfamilias, symbolized by the traditional role of carving the roast at dinner as the family looks on--not as formal as Norman Rockwell, but in the same vein, and I would guess that this image of Cheney is probably true.
The Newsweek image isn't quite as effective, but the prominence of this image (full page) in the context of the present discourse about Cheney and the article it was illustrating (Jonathan Alter, "Cheney's Misguided Morality"), it looks like it is trying to suggest that Cheney is a cold, bloodthirsty torturer who would stop at nothing to protect the interests of the oil industry, and I would guess that this image of Cheney is probably also true.
I'd say both images are truthful.
http://www.pdnpulse.com/2009/09/david-hume-kennerly-accuses-newsweek-of-photo-fakery.html
Kennerly's image says that Cheney is a paterfamilias, symbolized by the traditional role of carving the roast at dinner as the family looks on--not as formal as Norman Rockwell, but in the same vein, and I would guess that this image of Cheney is probably true.
The Newsweek image isn't quite as effective, but the prominence of this image (full page) in the context of the present discourse about Cheney and the article it was illustrating (Jonathan Alter, "Cheney's Misguided Morality"), it looks like it is trying to suggest that Cheney is a cold, bloodthirsty torturer who would stop at nothing to protect the interests of the oil industry, and I would guess that this image of Cheney is probably also true.
Demonizing Cheney is actually morally required!That man was bad. Anyway, this article does make one think.
http://kottke.org/09/09/is-cropping-a-photo-lying
Regards, Art.
cropping is not lying!
to answer Ralph. I do expect a photograph to represent the truth only what is shown in the pictures ( Although many photographs today are manipulated beyond this point) not to the extent of the viewer interpretation or whether or not the people in the pictures were acting etc...
Read "Republic" by plato
If I said "raping women is not much of a crime in countries that treat women as chattel and keeps them uneducated and controlled"
Call me naive, but I expect even more: a photograph should represent or quote the truth. IMHO blansky hit the nail. If you frame/crop/alter an image such that it suggests a different reality you misinform the viewer of that image, just like taking a quote out of context might misrepresent the original speaker.Expecting a photograph to show the truth is naive.
Call me naive, but I expect even more: a photograph should represent or quote the truth. IMHO blansky hit the nail. If you frame/crop/alter an image such that it suggests a different reality you misinform the viewer of that image, just like taking a quote out of context might misrepresent the original speaker.
Photographs do not lie. Nor do they tell the truth.
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