I have been reading AA's autobiography and have found it quite interesting regarding the debate in the early 1900's that photography itself was not considered an art form. So photographers began to present images as if they were paintings of some sort. Thus, there was this rebellious split around the 1930's in the photographic world, beginning with the Group f/64, that photography should not ever try to imitate any other art form. Keeping photography true to the purity of the "optical image" was the aim of the group and therefore it was considered "straight" in terms of the image itself and then presented on glossy paper that emphasized and enhanced the clarity of that image to reveal the fine detail of the subject .
Relationships of tonality within the image was a different thing altogether and perhaps that was where the art existed within the concept of "straight photography". Presenting an image while remaining true to the medium was photography and the art was found in the subject matter, perspective, composition, point of view, and, primarily, in the tonal relationships in the final print that expressed the artistic vision of the photographer. It was simply in "bad taste" to make a photograph only to present it as something more closely resembling a painting-----"pictorialism".
Edward Weston, a member of that group, was said to have called pictorial photography, the "fuzzy wuzzies".
I consider myself a "straight" shooter, even before I really even knew who AA was or other photograhers of that vein. Over all the years that I have been looking at photographs I never could find myself stimulated by the alternative processed images and I was always more captivated by pure images. It wasn't until I started diving into some history that I finally discovered why. And it is this concept of "straight photography" that explains it. As I was reading, I was wandering about other APUGers and how they considered themselves.
Are you a "straight" shooter or are you a "fuzzy wuzzy"?
Chuck
Relationships of tonality within the image was a different thing altogether and perhaps that was where the art existed within the concept of "straight photography". Presenting an image while remaining true to the medium was photography and the art was found in the subject matter, perspective, composition, point of view, and, primarily, in the tonal relationships in the final print that expressed the artistic vision of the photographer. It was simply in "bad taste" to make a photograph only to present it as something more closely resembling a painting-----"pictorialism".
Edward Weston, a member of that group, was said to have called pictorial photography, the "fuzzy wuzzies".
I consider myself a "straight" shooter, even before I really even knew who AA was or other photograhers of that vein. Over all the years that I have been looking at photographs I never could find myself stimulated by the alternative processed images and I was always more captivated by pure images. It wasn't until I started diving into some history that I finally discovered why. And it is this concept of "straight photography" that explains it. As I was reading, I was wandering about other APUGers and how they considered themselves.
Are you a "straight" shooter or are you a "fuzzy wuzzy"?
Chuck