Pieter12
Member
There are no rules, there is no truth, only assertions and assumptions.
No, you really can't. You can make a claim but you have no way to back it up. If all you know is the photo in front of you, not credited in any way, there is nothing you can say about what went into making it that's necessarily true. I'm not talking about stating an opinion that turns out to be correct. I'm talking about something that is necessarily true, just based on the viewing of the photo.
View attachment 377216
Selfie? Portrait? You probably know that's Dennis Stock - he's the guy that took the James Dean photo (walking down the street, famous Magnum dodge-and-burn mark-up available for purchase). You probably know Andreas Feininger took this photo. But what if you didn't? How many people were standing around when the photo was taken? What was the process of choosing this shot and not another one? Why has anyone seen this photo at all? None of these questions can be answered by just looking at the photo.
In the book LIFE Photographers What They Saw, Andreas Feininger tells the story of this photo:No, you really can't. You can make a claim but you have no way to back it up. If all you know is the photo in front of you, not credited in any way, there is nothing you can say about what went into making it that's necessarily true. I'm not talking about stating an opinion that turns out to be correct. I'm talking about something that is necessarily true, just based on the viewing of the photo.
View attachment 377216
Selfie? Portrait? You probably know that's Dennis Stock - he's the guy that took the James Dean photo (walking down the street, famous Magnum dodge-and-burn mark-up available for purchase). You probably know Andreas Feininger took this photo. But what if you didn't? How many people were standing around when the photo was taken? What was the process of choosing this shot and not another one? Why has anyone seen this photo at all? None of these questions can be answered by just looking at the photo.
There are no rules, there is no truth, only assertions and assumptions.
Acceptance and rejection.
there is no truth, only assertions and assumptions
I agree with @cliveh (although it has little bearing on the Leibovitz photo). It’s a characteristically instinctive composition. No matter where I start in HCB’s photo, my eye ends up in that lovers’ knot of arms and heads.I dunno. If you read the image from left to right, your eye follows the curve of the woman’s body to her face, then the man’s then catches the dark curtain which takes you right out of the frame.
Truth is a value of your assertions and assumptions, not a thing in itself. You know, an assertion can be silly, funny, poignant, serious, false, obnoxious, arrogant, sweet, fascile, true, etc. Is anyone going to say "There is no arrogance, only assertions and assumptions?" No - that assertion would be stupid.
Those are assertions.
But in the end, actionable, no?
And so?
We’re talking photographic compositions here.
Truth has nothing to do with composition. And there are rules if you choose to follow rules when composing. There are also rules if you choose to reference rules when judging a composition. There are plenty of rules - it's your choice to follow or ignore them.
You know, like the rule around here "40 km/hr in a school zone". You can follow that rule or you can ignore it. But whereas you might run over a bunch of kid ignoring that rule, the worst that happens if you ignore "rules of composition" is some people don't think your photo looks good. Doesn't exactly matter, does it?
Like I said, there is no truth, no rules. [in composition, the subject being discussed]
Not to start a pissing match, but rules in composition are arbitrary, useful for someone who may not have an "eye." And truth is relative. Your truth may not be mine.And you're wrong. There is truth, but it has nothing to do with composition but with whatever someone claims the photo to be, and the rules are there whether they're your rules or not - other people viewing your print may or may not think in terms of rules, and no amount of blithe disclaimer from you will change that.
And truth is relative. Your truth may not be mine.
That is a gross misconception. I'll leave it at that.
Arbitrary rules, by the way, are still rules. I already said you can ignore them if you wish - but it doesn't prevent other people from fully adopting them.
You can go ahead and be solipsistic if you want, though. I really don't why solipsists insist on trying to convince other people they should be solipsists, too, though. Seems a bit self-contradictory.
And truth is relative. Your truth may not be mine.
I'll let you know once I get this tree out of my head.is the equivalent of saying you live in your own reality, all by yourself.
As a moderator, I find it fascinating that a thread about Annie Leibovitz has descended into a near argument about philosophy!![]()
Is it a more or less a mandate to avoid verticals sticking up from heads (Baldessari’s aside)?There’s this portrait image of a set of our lovelies by Leibovitz which leaves the backdrop starkly through C.Turlington’s head hewn near equilaterally. Why is this deliberate composition fine (would students be excoriated for it)? Why not shift it? Is there an aesthetic meaning?
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