haris
Result.
John McCallum said:Great post. Coming from the premise that it takes other people to decide if you are a 'good' photographer.
Should the number of followers who understand and appreciate a photographers' work be an indicator of whether they are good? I don't know if that fits either. It must be relative within their chosen genre. For Photographic Artists; a level of sofistication in their message and in the viewer is necessary in order to be successful (successful in the sense the viewer connects with the work). Also, the right circumstances may need to prevail in order for the viewer to connect with the work - which could take time.
On the other hand, Salgado is widely regarded as good. He can gain a connection with almost anyone who views his images.
I still think Passion is wishy washy. Yes it's an important ingredient to be good, essential to be great. But, what of the other specifics?
John McCallum said:The image Paul Sorenson just posted is a good case in point. I think it is a very touching image - even though I'm not that way inclined.
Ed Sukach said:The opposite of "That which makes a BAD photographer".
Anyone want to tackle that one? What DOES make a "bad" photographer, assuming that such a type exists?
Good thought here. Do you know of any specific examples (rhetorical question - PLEASE do NOT name names here!)?TheFlyingCamera said:Someone who allows technical perfection (or the illusion thereof) to overwhelm the message of the medium. Someone who mismatches the medium to the message - there are some images that were better paintings, drawings, or sculpture. ...
A bad photographer is someone who fails, and doesn't even realize it.
Ed Sukach said:Good thought here. Do you know of any specific examples (rhetorical question - PLEASE do NOT name names here!)?
I've been searching my memory ... I think "overwhelming the message with the concern for technical perfection" is certainly close ... but I cannot think of ONE "bad" photographer, if the evaluation is done by the consideration of their WORK.
Personality, integrity, the desire to "get ahead over the bones of others" ... I've seen a lot of that, but I still cannot directly link the idea that "their work is `bad', ergo, they are `bad' photographers."
I have seen a lot of "dead" photographs, where there may have been (n.b. "may" .. I really don't know) an unreasonable amount of attention to getting the photograph technically perfect, to the point of elimination of the human ... read: aesthetic ... quality.
There is a second question raised here: How do we - or anyone else, KNOW when a photograph "fails"? --- or, "succeeds"?
Michaelblansky said:What makes a good photographer?
Passion.
MIchael
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