Wim Wenders exhibits and gives interviews, he gets noticed. Mobile phone shooters post their visual effluvia on Flickr or other such sites, and are quickly forgotten. So it goes.
Colin Corneau (#8 and #15) and rgeorge911 (#11) echoe my thoughts about all this. Not only has photography in general become devalued now, but image standards in general have fallen to such dismally low levels that most people (excepting posters on Photrio, of course) no longer know or even care what a good photograph is. "I can do the same as that" and "you could do that" are the most common responses I hear from those viewing images at the few local (in Hobart and Launceston, Tasmania) gallery exhibitions I now and then see, occasionally one worthy of a return visit but largely so trite (often at the local community level, I must note) that I have to force myself to look at poorly taken, badly post-processed and cheaply printed digicrap in fancy frames which, sadly, seem to impress the proles more than the visuals. As an example, a recent show (self sponsored and funded) at our local community center, 40 'hand printed' (probably on a Fuji Frontier at a Harvey Normans retail store) images of otters taken in a zoo, with cute camera-magazine captions, promoted as "a housewife-photographer" and which must have cost the ;artist' a small fortune to prepare (or her businessman-partner a nice tax deduction) and resulted in ONE sale ,I suspect by prearrangement by a family member or friend. Sadly, all this now seems to be the norm.
There are many good photographers, but certainly here in Australia, what I see reflects the sad fact that those talented artists who strive to let their visuals stand on their own, are mostly overwhelmed by socially ambitious shooters who know how to use marketing and hype to draw attention to their usually undistinguished but well (= expensively) framed work. Depressingly low quality standards prevail and seemingly are accepted as the norm.
Mobile phones have their place in image making, but in the right hands. For the rest, the two Fs - Facebook and Flickr - are ideal forums for one's 14,293 shots of last weekend's pool party or the disco bash. May I say, I have never seen much of interest visually in the first F, but on occasion the second has offered some interesting posts.
Mr Wenders is fortunate that he has his reputation as an artist to fall back on and a loyal and dedicated following to support his endeavors. Also that he did a lot of his work in the 1980s and 1990s when photography was a different art with different standards and audiences.
Me, now that I no longer (I hope only temporarily) take photographs for publication, my best images are printed (in my own darkroom) and hung on our walls for family and friends to see. a captive audience, to be sure, but I'm satisfied with this. Beyond that, I no longer have any ambitions to impress the world with my visual viewpoints.
Horses for courses, as the locals here are fond of saying.