Yale 2017 MFAs - Oh, the ennui

Signs & fragments

A
Signs & fragments

  • 4
  • 0
  • 53
Summer corn, summer storm

D
Summer corn, summer storm

  • 2
  • 2
  • 54
Horizon, summer rain

D
Horizon, summer rain

  • 0
  • 0
  • 51
$12.66

A
$12.66

  • 7
  • 5
  • 204

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
198,819
Messages
2,781,312
Members
99,715
Latest member
Ivan Marian
Recent bookmarks
0

nmp

Member
Joined
Jan 20, 2005
Messages
2,017
Location
Maryland USA
Format
35mm
I really find the premise of this 'critique' to be really tiresome. It literally makes me tired to read this sort of dross. How the hell would you know whether these kids were spoiled and pampered? Just b/c they're at Yale? Kids just now venturing out into the world from academia and there you are yelling at them to get off your lawn.

+1
 

guangong

Member
Joined
Sep 10, 2009
Messages
3,589
Format
Medium Format
Having taught at one of those prestigious towers of higher learning until recently and compared with students in earlier decades with few exceptions they are spoiled and pampered. This is the generation in which everyone gets a trophy for being the best, mommy and daddy pay all of their expenses and bills and everyone gets an "A". During my last years (at an institution where tuition approaches $60,000/yr) my colleagues and I found it necessary to ask if everyone could read script. Basically, college is the new high school.
 
OP
OP
ParkerSmithPhoto
Joined
Jan 16, 2010
Messages
1,685
Location
Atlanta, GA
Format
Medium Format
I don't even need to look at the link to know this is bunkum.
You judge students just starting out on their journey against great artists, and despair that they don't come up to snuff, even though they barely had time to learn their craft. And at the same time you have some deluded belief that art is something you can be taught, and that somehow a photographer from Yale (I'm guessing it's in the US?) should naturally have more talent than someone from L'viv Technical College.
In both these assumptions, you reveal yourself to be an idiot.

Gosh, Timmy! Tell us how you really feel.

Again, THESE ARE MASTERS OF FINE ART. From YALE UNIVERSITY. MASTERS, as in THE BEST OF THE BEST.

So, I have some "deluded belief" that art can be taught? Or, I'm an idiot because I'm judging them by comparing them to great artists, when they haven't had time to learn their craft? And from whom would they learn their craft, if art is something that can't be taught???

If you're going to call someone an idiot be sure not to make yourself look like one in the process.

Plus, it's bad form to pop off without even glancing at the material to familiarize yourself with the discussion at hand.
 
Last edited:

jerrybro

Member
Joined
Feb 20, 2005
Messages
395
Location
Philippines
Format
Large Format Pan
I think I said the same thing the last time I posted a reply to one of these threads, but I just don't get it. I see some well executed shots from a technical perspective, but a 5 year old with an IPhone can do that today. I see a perfectly clear picture of a tire track in the snow, hardly noteworthy to any New Englander. I know some people do not understand what the big deal is with some tree and mountain pictures taken by dead photographers decades ago, but at least they demonstrated some mastery of the tools and techniques needed to produce the output. A couple of these look like last mnute shots taken in submission to a late homework assignment.

Of course, I could be totally wrong.
 

Peter Schrager

Subscriber
Joined
Jul 19, 2004
Messages
4,158
Location
fairfield co
Format
Large Format
I think the real problem with Yale, and academic photography programs in general, is that they are making art for an audience of other academic photographers while ignoring nearly everyone else. The work is interesting to other people within their group and mostly lost on people outside. I see a whole lot of this at the regional and national conferences of Society for Photographic Education and in magazines like PDN and Ain't Bad.
Out of touch??...photography is an art not in a day week or 2 years of graduate programs
 
Joined
Jul 31, 2012
Messages
3,352
Format
35mm RF
I think the real problem with Yale, and academic photography programs in general, is that they are making art for an audience of other academic photographers while ignoring nearly everyone else. The work is interesting to other people within their group and mostly lost on people outside. I see a whole lot of this at the regional and national conferences of Society for Photographic Education and in magazines like PDN and Ain't Bad.

This is what I referred to earlier with the "club" comment, although you put it in a much more descriptive manner. My club comment is basically just my observation over the years that if you ain't in it, you ain't invited.

I had never heard about Ain't Bad. I must not get out much....
 

removed account4

Subscriber
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
Messages
29,832
Format
Hybrid
when MAS did the large scale deadpan color prison inmate portraits a few years ago did he get recognized/ admitted into the "club"
 
OP
OP
ParkerSmithPhoto
Joined
Jan 16, 2010
Messages
1,685
Location
Atlanta, GA
Format
Medium Format
I think the real problem with Yale, and academic photography programs in general, is that they are making art for an audience of other academic photographers while ignoring nearly everyone else. The work is interesting to other people within their group and mostly lost on people outside.

The audience for great photographers like Adams and Strand is already small enough. When contemporary photographers work in this esoteric "inside baseball" style, people just tune it out. It's a bit sad, because although the galleries can push this stuff, they can only push so much, and many of these students who have spent huge amounts of money to be "educated" in the academic style of photography will suddenly realize that their art has less value to the average person than a good loaf of bread.
 

removed account4

Subscriber
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
Messages
29,832
Format
Hybrid
I'm not familiar with that acronym or the images. Do you have a link available?

hi greg

michael a smith ( the ULF / azo / lodima ) person
IDK about 10-12 years ago ( i am searching for the link but can't find it )
there was talk/posts and links to giant color ink jet portraits he made of prison inmates.
they were impressive. i'll keep looking and see if i can find them.
personally, i like the pre 1920s aesthetic of non smiling ( almost grumpy looking / bored ) portraits
( im a fan of disfarmer too :smile: )
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom