Alan Edward Klein
Member
Why?The people who need visualization the most are slide shooters who project their work.
Why?The people who need visualization the most are slide shooters who project their work.
Because the in camera controls are essentially the only controls available to them. They have to be able to visualize the results with exactitude, because you can't fix anything later.Why?
Because the in camera controls are essentially the only controls available to them. They have to be able to visualize the results with exactitude, because you can't fix anything later.
I think your point is the point I was trying to make. Visualization, especially the redundant and meaningless word previsualization, makes it seem photography is some sort of a black art, rather than a good sense of a learned craft. I can't draw worth a damn. I have trouble with stick figures. So photography gives me a chance to be creative without having the eye-hand mastery of an artist who paints for example.Isn't that simply judgement which is of course vital, especially in colour slide work. The problem with visualisation is that it conjures up an almost mystical thing which borders on it being a kind of a gift that many will never have by definition of the word gift
Visualisation sort of suggests something removed from anything to do with technical ability as if it were "artistry" which most assume is given to a relatively small percentage of the human race.
pentaxuser
He's up to Edition 4. Which one?Adams and his contemporaries tended to write in a style that was rather grandiose, but I would suggest that most of the mysticism comes from others.
I understand where they were coming from, mostly because I've dealt with so many people - those amongst the majority of amateur photographers - who were casual snap-shooters who didn't visualize the results before they snapped the shutter.
Most of the regular posters here are quite intentional about their photography, even the more instinctual ones (jnantz comes to mind). When "visualization" was being coined, that didn't apply to most users of photography.
If I were to write a book on photographic visualization today, it would be difficult to avoid an appearance of mysticism.
If you want an example of someone who writes well about essentially the same thing as visualization, but avoids mysticism (and a fair bit of the technical), I might suggest Freeman Patterson. "Photography and the Art of Seeing" would be a good choice.
I think that really overstates the case. Nobody worth listening to, including Ansel Adams, ever made a grandiose black box of “visualization”. It has never been anything more than imagining what you’d like the result to look like. It’s a normal part of any creative process, and applies to any artform. It can also change at any time, and can be part of any step in the process. It’s just a fancy word for imagining. That’s all.
Adams and his contemporaries tended to write in a style that was rather grandiose
I doubt it matters.He's up to Edition 4. Which one?
Visualization is analogous to a visual artist (painter, sculptor) realizing an artistic idea (meaningful unit) in a finished artwork, through the actions particular to bringing that artwork into existence.
And that is what is never explained, or at least I've felt that it was never explained. Maybe because it cannot be explained, or perhaps because I've gotten too bogged down in the scientific, and mathematical technicalities of photography to realize it.
That, making (and learning from) mistakes, and looking at a lot of good photographs will take one a long way. It helps one from making the same sort of image over and over.
Really? Sounds a little boring...unless it gets better each time.It can also help someone make exactly the same sort of image over and over, which is a lot of peoples' goal.
Really? Sounds a little boring...unless it gets better each time.
No -- different twist on the concept all together. We all take photos of the same thing -- light -- how boring!
It is doing it the same way 150 times that should be avoided...not the subject matter.
…..without resorting to the use of many incomprehensible sketches.
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