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Makers or Takers

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Can you give some examples? Certainly things like adding or removing objects, HDR, "super-resolution", AI night view "enhancement" etc all distort physical reality.

But I'm open to examples you have in mind. Adjustment of colour perhaps?

Me:
But there is always the possibility that an altered image can actually describe reality more fully to the viewer than an unaltered image.

Ansel's use of heavy filters and burning to get black Sierra skies. Yes, they are not 'real' skies, but for those of us who have spent afternoons under those skies with thunder storms rolling in like clockwork, shaking the air around you at 11,000 feet, those photographic black skies and white clouds feel like or represent the reality of being there -- a threatening sky. One is not suppose to be comfortable seeing anything close to a black sky. Lightning is about to dance around you, the wind will blow hard from all directions, and sleet will be coming down upon your head.

Moonrise... is another AA example. Originally printed with a 'real' pre-sunset sky, the image eventually drifted further from 'reality' to a black sky. And like the image or not, it was very successful.

Careful manipulation can help to induce an emotional response from the viewer due to that 'enhanced' reality. Actually, every decision made at the enlarger (or at the computer) is changing the original representation of reality (the negative). Burn the corners in to keep the viewers' eyes within the image and one has altered the reality of the altered reality of the negative. So to speak. 😎
 
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Anyway, I still think the whole thing is just silly. The moment you frame a photograph, you deliberately slice a tiny bit of reality (across several dimensions) that then gets encoded in a way that uses physical structures entirely unrelated to the reality that briefly existed in front of the lens. Every photo is 'fake', and 'made'. There's no pure 'taking'; it's all manipulation right from the get-go.

Show a (straight, realistic, detailed) photo of a cat to another cat - it will simply ignore it. Show a cat another actual cat, and you'll have a chaotic furball on your hands. The only difference between a 'taken' and a 'made' photo is the degree to which we allow ourselves to be fooled into believing a symbol.

Exactly. I think @cliveh has adopted for himself a set of HCB’s rules (seize the moment, compose in camera, print the whole negative, don’t monkey unduly with the print) that for HCB delivered artistic integrity in the sphere of photojournalism. I like do the same myself, largely because I’m more of a hunter than a painter. I don’t believe that approach is uniquely valid, nor that it amounts to realism. Of course manipulation/making starts as soon as you decide to take a photo.
 
Ansel's use of heavy filters and burning to get black Sierra skies. Yes, they are not 'real' skies, but for those of us who have spent afternoons under those skies with thunder storms rolling in like clockwork, shaking the air around you at 11,000 feet, those photographic black skies and white clouds feel like or represent the reality of being there -- a threatening sky. One is not suppose to be comfortable seeing anything close to a black sky.

Careful manipulation can help to induce an emotional response from the viewer due to that 'enhanced' reality. Actually, every decision made at the enlarger is changing the original representation of reality (the negative). Burn the corners in to keep the viewers' eyes within the image and one has altered the reality of the altered reality of the negative. So to speak. 😎

Of course I agree with you and I'm not suggesting for a moment the people should not post-process photos, whether originally analogue or digital ... that's surely part of the creative process, which as you point out, feels like or represents the reality of being there. There's a time and place for everything.

I guess my own (stereo) photos are capturing ordinary street and urban scenes ... complete with litter, rubbish bins, non-posed people etc ... and because the photos are colour transparencies, viewed optically (no digital anything), I see in stereo what was recorded by the camera. No added dramatic sky, or removed/inserted "artistic" object whether animal, vegetable or mineral! That dog peeing against the lamppost is a real dog, that's real pee and a real lamppost!

Of course I accept others prefer the creative "making" process ... add the dog/pee/lamppost if that's what you prefer (it's more hygienic!).
 
Careful manipulation can help to induce an emotional response from the viewer due to that 'enhanced' reality. Actually, every decision made at the enlarger (or at the computer) is changing the original representation of reality (the negative). Burn the corners in to keep the viewers' eyes within the image and one has altered the reality of the altered reality of the negative. So to speak. 😎
If you're creative, the more complex the better. You want to tell a story, you need to manipulate. There's many emotions, the more you can work on the better. Make the picture alive, hold the viewers attention, take them to another place.
A picture paints a thousand words.
 
I guess my own (stereo) photos are capturing ordinary street and urban scenes ... complete with litter, rubbish bins, non-posed people etc ... and because the photos are colour transparencies, viewed optically (no digital anything), I see in stereo what was recorded by the camera. No added dramatic sky, or removed/inserted "artistic" object whether animal, vegetable or mineral! That dog peeing against the lamppost is a real dog, that's real pee and a real lamppost!
This is interesting (to me, at least) as it implies a dimension to the question that heretofore does not appear to have been discussed. It seems to me that pictures seem more real to the creator who actually saw (or imagined) the scene than they do to others whop are seeing the resulting photograph, made or taken; 2-D or 3-D.
 
I question the logic behind calling something more real than something else. Something is real or it is not..there is no scale of realness. One is pregnant or not. Alive or dead, real or not real.

The photographer just has the memory connection between the image and its taking,,,and that can drive the making.

I print full frame with no dodging or burning, but not to keep it 'real', but to make the hunt for light enjoyable and meaningful to me...using the light to paint an image onto the film about how the light defines a place.

Photography does not and has never captured reality. Photoshopping a unicorn into an image is just as 'real' as photographing a horse. IMO. The only thing that counts is that whatever one does to one's image it should push its story forward.
 
I agree, Vaughn. But there are some folks who have declared in their "critique"/comment that some photos do not represent reality, or the film that the photo was taken with isn't being "correctly" represented in their "real attributes". Whether it's a personal philosophy on "reality" or their perception of "reality", declaring a photo to be real of not is the problem in discussions like this.

More folks should live and let live... or, perhaps, just remain silent. Not everything desires or requires a response. Sometimes just looking is sufficient.
 
This is interesting (to me, at least) as it implies a dimension to the question that heretofore does not appear to have been discussed. It seems to me that pictures seem more real to the creator who actually saw (or imagined) the scene than they do to others whop are seeing the resulting photograph, made or taken; 2-D or 3-D.

You are spot on for stereo! The whole idea (at least for me) is not to take a photo with a "dramatic" 3D effect, but rather to take a photo that recreates the scene in a realistic fashion. When you view a stereo pair in a good immersive optical viewer, it's as though you are standing there, exactly where you took the photo, and you can look around the scene; usually, on looking at the reconstructed science I see all kinds of detail that I missed when taking the photo!

For me, the "making" is in the taking ... if that makes sense. Once you have the colour transparencies, the only options to "alter" the 3D effect are (i) cropping and (ii) adjusting the viewing window, both in the mounting process. (In fact I always use 50x50mm window mounts, so there's not much cropping flexibility for the approx 56x56mm images.)
 
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