Bill Burk
Subscriber
- Joined
- Feb 9, 2010
- Messages
- 9,156
- Format
- 4x5 Format
In his 1892 article "A Plea for Art Photography in America", Alfred Stieglitz explained that when compared to English photographers, Americans lack taste and sense for composition and for tone...
and that tone is the dividing line between a photograph and a picture.
The distinction caught my eye because at the same time I picked up an English book, Landscape Photography by Leonard & Marjorie Gayton which repeats the word picture dozens of times in the first chapter ...
I never knew that there was a difference in meaning between the two words. I always worry that I am going to learn something important very late in the game. I seriously doubt that calling them by another name would change the photographs I have taken and the pictures I have printed.
But what if I had this wrong all along? Maybe all I have ever done is take photographs... and I should have been taking pictures instead.
and that tone is the dividing line between a photograph and a picture.
The distinction caught my eye because at the same time I picked up an English book, Landscape Photography by Leonard & Marjorie Gayton which repeats the word picture dozens of times in the first chapter ...
I never knew that there was a difference in meaning between the two words. I always worry that I am going to learn something important very late in the game. I seriously doubt that calling them by another name would change the photographs I have taken and the pictures I have printed.
But what if I had this wrong all along? Maybe all I have ever done is take photographs... and I should have been taking pictures instead.
Last edited by a moderator: