[Joe,
"I think it's useful to remember that none of the great trail blazers - be it in photography in particular, art in general, or the world at large - ever undertook to be a trail blazer."
I disagree with your premise. Many people working in many fields have set out with a determination to break new graound, or change the course of events in some way. The idea that passion and forethought are somehow mutually exclusive is ridiculous, and The notion that art and artists are wholely dependant upon passion and inspiration is a romantic fantasy.]
Jay, I disagree with your disagreement. To clarify, I did not mean to imply that passion and forethought were mutually exclusive, and a great many 'trail blazers' may have consciously sought to create something unique, to raise the bar even. But I know of no examples in which an artist set as their challenge to alter the course of their medium, or at least those that did created something wholly uninteresting, and did not achieve that end. This is based on my experiences and readings, and I would of course be interested in learning of those who did set out to alter the course of things as their predominant motivation. And it's not only artists who are dependent on passion and inspiration. As one of the wise men from the East said, to attempt anything without passion is like dressing up a corpse. The surface may be nice and polished looking, but beneath it is dead.
["We don't look for meaning in art, we look to art to discover our own meaning."
Are you suggesting that art is meaningless? Could you clarify the above statement?]
On it's own, of course art is meaningless. We give meaning to art, totally dependent on the filters of our personalities, beliefs and life experiences. You might listen to a dynamic piece of Classical music and visualize a thunderstorm in the mountains or the plains, while I - hearing the exact same music at the exact same time - might visualize the waves crashing against the rocks at Big Sur. And the composer may have intended us to visualize armies marching into battle. That's why, no matter how consciously I create something and strive to imbue it with a certain meaning of my own choosing, you may look at it and find a completely different meaning. Are you wrong? Of course not - the universe looks different through each set of eyes. Did I do a poor job of creating? Not necessarily. Actually I get the biggest kick out of hearing other people's take on what they find in a photograph I've taken or some fiction I've written. But what I have found time and again is that when I have strived single-mindedly to evoke a certain thought or emotion, without integrating a fair amount of passion or inspiration, the viewer/reader can always tell the difference and always finds the work lacking a certain something. This is of course nothing more than my perception of these things, and as they say, there is no reality - only perception. That your reality might differ from mine is only natural, and is probably the major cause of communication breakdown between individuals, and groups for that matter (not that I sense any friction between you and I, just different ways of looking at things, and maybe a problem with me adding thoughts to the discussion before I've allowed them to fully form - one of the many predicaments of message board communication). That said, I look forward to reading more about your own search out of this photography ennui.
Joe