I was involved for many years in local and national photographic competitions and any prints submitted would be automatically disqualified if the photographers name was on the front and could be seen by the judges, to avoid any favouritism.
trying to sign on the (front) a.k.a -super coating (gelatin) is a bad idea(imo).
The whole idea that photography could be sold as "Art" is a fairly recent idea since WW11 that was largely promulgated by galleries , and photographers agents to increase the products that they could make a profit on by displaying.
Why? I only use matte papers, and sign on the print, using pencil. It doesn't do any damage to the surface.
I should have written "more prevalent since WW11".Actually the idea that photography could be sold as art began much sooner. One of the first (if not the first) galleries promoting photography opened in 1905 by Alfred Stieglitz in NYC, gallery 291. I have no idea of the WW impact and when similar galleries opened in Paris, London, Prague? (any art historians among us?).
Certainly Richard in the days that I became interested in photography in 1953 if you would have told the majority of serious photographers that what they were shooting was " Art", they would have probably laughed in you're face.Photography might have been "sold as art" from a while back but it wasn't until much more recently that the more prominent galleries and museums took it at a serious level even close to other forms of art.
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