Vaughn
Subscriber
Depends on what the rules are.
If one is trying to restrict their Art to things they create which are entirely new and original to them, then on.
But if their Art is more akin to a performance than that, why not?
If photographing Art cannot be Art, than I expect that photographing people can't be Art - and on that I am keen to disagree.
As if you could get artists to agree on a, b or c.I do not think the laws of transitivity apply to art.
Would you let someone do this with your photofraphs?
What if your photographing the work ( sculpture &c ) shows it in a way that its creator hadn't see before? It's like a fresh pair of eyes looking for something that was lost, or someone with no knowledge of a subject coming up with some sort of reinterpretation that was never thought of or intended. If I remember correctly the scientist who discovered the reason for the Space Shuttle's O-Ring disaster repeatedly dunked his O'rings in ice water while the other scientists around him were saying " what are you doing, you aren't supposed to be doing that, this is serious stuff" ... and he came to the realization the rings failed when they got cold. ... or the often times great photographs that someone who has no photography experience / baggage ( rules, "can't do this or that" ) vs someone who has been working at their skill/craft for IDK 2, 5, 10, 20 of 40 years and might be working out of habit, instead of the Winograd? mode of "I wonder what this might look like on film" .I feel like: if I am photographing something that someone else created to elicit a feeling from the viewer, and I'm just duplicating the response someone would get from viewing it in person, then it's simply reproduction work.
awty : I forgot to state in my post #29 : In the US a film academy is an absolute must! Guess in Australia it is not easy without having! But in parts of the rest of the world it is NO GUARANTEEBeing rather new to the photography world I was surprised by how so many photographers consider their, what I thought were just photographs, to be art. Especially how most seem to prefer to talk about the technique and tools over the content, but I have no education in art or arts, so what would I know, the dictionary definition seems to be wide and inclusive.
Happy just to do my naive picture making unburden with labels. Sometimes I take photographs of others art, mostly because Im too cheap to buy the post card in the gift shop.
awty : I forgot to state in my post #29 : In the US a film academy is an absolute must! Guess in Australia it is not easy without having! But in parts of the rest of the world it is NO GUARANTEE
to become a pros..........perhaps in the US it is also NO GUARANTEE at all - but generally
it could help!
with regards
< ... >Especially how most seem to prefer to talk about the technique and tools over the content <... >
Thanks macfred for remind me about the issue! Yes and it is correct - I'd to pay a monthly sum^ You probably heard already in the gossip factory that Sean decided to tax excessive use of emoticons by non-subscribers ??
I feel something turns to art when it translates a feeling. I feel like: if I am photographing something that someone else created to elicit a feeling from the viewer, and I'm just duplicating the response someone would get from viewing it in person, then it's simply reproduction work. To me it feel cheap, like all I am doing is reporting to someone not standing there what the original artist intended the viewer to feel. That has a place, but I sure wouldn't call it art.
In contrast, the attached is my attempt to convey to a viewer the creepy feeling I got when walking through these swampy, mossy woods on an overcast afternoon. Some people might not see/feel anything, or something different than "a creepy feeling" I was trying to convey? But I know what was in front of my camera isn't the result of someone else's work to do the same.
View attachment 220978
Yes you would have a hard time being hired in Australia without some form of Higher education accreditation, regardless of your ability. If you gained a credible reputation overseas, it may be enough in the film industry, I dont know.awty : I forgot to state in my post #29 : In the US a film academy is an absolute must! Guess in Australia it is not easy without having! But in parts of the rest of the world it is NO GUARANTEE
to become a pros..........perhaps in the US it is also NO GUARANTEE at all - but generally
it could help!
with regards
awty, I think it is much easier to talk about gear and technique than intangible things like atmophere, beauty and other esoterics. Makes no matter with me that everyone is an artist
the more artists the better as far as I am concerned, even if they don't have a background in eugenics, or an artist's statement or know the difference between complimentary colors or magenta. If the people in charge were occupied by making art instead of misery we'd be in a better place spiritually, metaphysically and globally.
YMMV
Unless you are photographing Art, eh, you know Art, the guy, everyone likes to take Art's picture, we'll because he's Art! You know .Depends on what the rules are.
If one is trying to restrict their Art to things they create which are entirely new and original to them, then on.
But if their Art is more akin to a performance than that, why not?
If photographing Art cannot be Art, than I expect that photographing people can't be Art - and on that I am keen to disagree.
Jim I agree with that you just stated 100%. Well said - therefore on has to differentiate in generalThere's a long history of painters copying other painters works. In some cases, the copy becomes as famous or even more famous and valuable than the original. For example, Van Gogh's "The Sower" is more famous than Millet's, whom he copied. Gauguin's "Spirit of the Dead Watching" is a copy of Manet's "Olympia", which is itself a copy of Titian's "Venus of Urbino". Duchamp took a poster of the "Mona Lisa" and Drew a mustache on her and write the letter's L.H.O.O.Q. (a pun in French) at the bottom. I myself have sold several paintings in galleries that were copies of famous works, but with minor tweaks.
The trick is to make it your own. Then you're not copying their work, but reinterpretting their work.
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