RAP said:
What we should be concentrating on as the photographer, artist is what and how, we place within the confines of the four borders, what we are working with. This is what really matters.
Techniques and individual vision should eventually merge together so that the viewing auidience really doesn't care how the image was made, but are caught up in the subject itself. If repeatedly asked the whats or hows of technique, maybe the image really doesn't say anything at all.
Thanks, RAP. I was all set to write, very nearly, the same words, and it has been a trying, and rewarding day.
I'll agree with Susan Sontag. To me, deconstruction and trying to reduce photography into "basic elements" is a fruitless misuse of time. I may well "learn" all the things to watch out for and correct, next time but that will be a LONG list, and the same scene, under closely comparable conditions happens very infrequently - in fact I can't remember one time.
I wonder how many of us have taken a photograph, and come to the conclusion that "it ALMOST works ... but ... And returned to the same place, with he same equipment, and TRIED to make the necessary corrections. I have, and that has never been successful.
One characteristic seems to be essential: spontaneity. The less I 'think", the more I let "my inner self" takeover, the better the work seems to be. Undeniably, the reverse of spontaneity is overworking, trying with every ounce of one's fiber to get everything absolutely "right" - when there is NO absolutely right. .
I've worked with - witnessed is a better choice of word - with a few of the most significant photographers of the time ... and even with extensive preparation, hundreds of miles of travel, careful consideration and preparation of studio backgrounds and lighting, the photograph is ultimately the result of a momentary impulse. One example was Arnold Newman. After much preparation, he would say, "There is a photograph here somewhere. All I have to do is find it." Then, suddenly, "There it is!!" and the shutter would be tripped.
One thing bothers me - why is there such a predisposition to condemn other photographers for "cheating"? "They are only trying to pass off inferior, seriously flawed, incompetent work as art". I refuse to "judge"another artists motivation. I always look at the work. If it works, it is a good piece of work. If afterwards I find that the artist was criminally immoral, or cheated, or even if he stole anothers work, I may have an extremely negative perception of the person, but that does not affect the way I feel about the piece of art.
As the curator of a local Art Gallery, I have met a few artists who firmly believe someone else is "cheating" - "but not me, I never cheat." In truth, although there a many strange characters among artists, I've never met one who honestly believed their work was "inferior", and had chosen the course of "covering up their faults" by labeling the work
art- cheated.
Take that as a compliment, all. Certainly we all have our faults, but I do NOT believe a lack of integrity is one of them.
I've had it for today. Time to kick back and shake hands with Mr. Jim Beam.