wfe
Member
Seriously, I think painting all digital work as unethical is a bit of a stretch. It is akin to saying that because a gun is used in a horrible school shooting that anyone using or even owning a gun is an evildoer.
Sure digital work can be manipulated, but that doesn't mean that it necessarily is. And this was an issue long before digital. The famous Gene Smith photo of Schweitzer springs to mind as a interesting photo manipulated masterfully in the darkroom in order to 'tell a story'.
This 'ethics' approach taken to its logical limit would indict users of Velvia as evil manipulators. I have used that film in many situations over the years, and the supersaturated chromes that come back don't look very much like the actual scene that was in front of my camera when the shutter was tripped (at least in terms of color) . Does the fact that I have a supersaturated transparency that doesn't much resemble reality indicate that I am trying to manipulate the viewer? My thought has always been that I am trying to make a cool picture. That is enough for me.
I think the only (hopelessly naive, IMO) expectations most viewers have for photos is in the realm of photojournalistic work. It would be pretty to think that those photos are unmanipulated. But if you think about it more than a second, it becomes obvious that just the mere act of framing a photo is manipulating reality, since it involves a judgement of what to show and what not to show the viewer. I think the whole notion of manipulations exists on a continuum from 'not much' to 'a whole lot'.
And is not just the advent of digital photography that created this. It has been around a long time. Just check out 'Fading Away' by Henry Peach Robinson:
Dead Link Removed
This photo was made in 1858, when photography was still in its infancy. And already it was being manipulated to tell a story.
Plus c'est la meme chose, plus ça change, eh?
Thank you Clay...
Cheers,
Bill