Out to Lunch
Ventor
No problem: just add that you invite those who post their own photos to critique yours. Cheers, OtL
This actually sounds like it might be what I am looking for at this stage of the game. Perhaps one of you could tell me a bit more about how this works. Thanks in advance!
Why limit this to the Gallery? Whenever positing a picture in whatever thread, just add the invitation: ''Please critique my photo''. Cheers, OtL
This last sentence should probably be part of the conversation. There are many people on this forum who post thoughtful comments, but never post photos to the threads, or the gallery. In a photo forum all the verbal posts, no matter how thoughtful or informative, go nowhere towards informing other members who you are, as a photographer. It’s another case of a picture being worth a thousand words. If everyone posted more of their own photos, more often, it would go a long way towards making their critiques of another’s work more meaningful to that person, or, as Guth intimates, less meaningful. If someone offers either kudos or downvotes to your work here, that’s only really helpful if you know who they are, and if they haven’t been posting their own photos, and enough of them to delineate their “vision”, nobody really has any idea how they might be as a judge, or more specifically, “their” judge.
Obviously no one should feel compelled to post their photos if they don’t feel like it, but it does enter into the mentoring/critiquing discussion, I would think.
I hate to be so cynical about it, but my own experience reading comments about photographs across many forums is that with rare exception, none of it, positive or negative, however well intentioned, is likely to make you a better photographer.
Guth: I suggest developing a relationship, which may be virtual, with one individual that you have developed confidence in their ability to offer helpful critique. They need time to understand what you are trying to accomplish. You want to make sure you weed out those who do not have the knowledge base to actually help as well as those who will only offer consistent "attaboy"s. You will want your discussions to be private so they will have no hesitancy giving their honest opinion.
My personal view is that public opinion from responders that you know nothing about is slightly worse than neutral. They can have a tendency to narrow your view to that of group.
I see the key problem with critique in general is that the person offering the critique has no clue what the photographer was trying to accomplish with the photograph. Vast majority of the time it is because the photographer had no idea themselves. Sometimes a critiquer can review a body of work and implicitly conclude what the photographer was implicitly trying to do. Sometimes not. It is next to impossible to evaluate a trip with no clue where you wanted to go.
A key lesson I learned from a instructor / mentor who was a broad thinker and good communicator while being a mediocre photographer was her questions:
* Why does this photograph exist?
* What were you trying to do with this photo? What was your message or goal?
* How well do you think you did at accomplishing you goal?
I learned the key point was not her responses but my own. I began to repeat that process by myself when editing. It was not easy. Too simple to cheat by just mentally assuming "obvious, you know, everybody knows" and moving on. But forcing myself to really answer those questions became key in self editing, either an individual photo or a body of work.
We all have our preferences and there is no wrong way here, and I've been on both sides of that issue; I used to devalue opinions shared about photography unless the critic had work on display that I admired. And if the photographer happened to share work and be an awful photographer I thought even less of their remarks.
But criticism is different from the art being critiqued, whether movies, music, photography, or anything else, and I no longer feel there is a need for the critic to be an accomplished photographer in order to engage in an erudite discussion about the work.
What's important to me now are the critic's ideas, how they are delivered, and whether or not they encourage me to develop my ideas.
Some great photographers are terrible critics, and vice versa.
I’d like to be Galen Rowell; I don’t really have any interest in Robert Mapplethorpe’s style, although they might both be great photographers. Not that I’d disregard any advice from Mapplethorpe if I got any, but it’s immensely helpful to know where people are “coming from” and mull all of that over together. Both dead, but you catch my meaning.
CMur12;2993038...I have only offered feedback in the form of acclaim for an image I really like said:As long as the person offering feedback is courteous and specific about what they see, the original photographer can easily determine if the feedback is of value to him/her or if it is to be disregarded.[/COLOR]
I believe that feedback will either speak to the photographer, or it won't, regardless of whether the feedback comes from someone who has posted photos in the gallery.
- Murray
... it would be better if the vision of the person criticizing my photos matched my vision, or what I thought was my vision. And, I have no way of knowing what their vision is unless I have seen enough of their work to internalize it. ...
It’s possible to brighten someone’s day with nothing more than a “that’s nice” even though that doesn’t help their development at all, other than encouraging them to keep at it. As long as you mean it, and you mean it because it strikes you in some way. If you want to get more analytical on top of that, so much the better.