A single picture can not tell a story - poll

A single picture can not tell a story - poll

  • Agree

    Votes: 27 17.9%
  • Disagree

    Votes: 124 82.1%

  • Total voters
    151
  • Poll closed .
I really enjoy most of the discussions at RFF ... but sometimes they do go on a bit and I find myself browsing the gear threads! :D
 
All great single photographs but they are not the story tellers.

Its all been talked to death over hear
http://www.rangefinderforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=131018

Were just going to have to agree to disagree. And just because one view is more popular than another it doesn't mean that the popular view is right. There are many myths that a majority of people believe to be true and the world of photography is no exception. A lot of newspapers could save a small fortune in indeed a single photograph could tell a story. No need for copy writers or photo essays.
 
Photography and forensics have a little in common IMO ... they can both reconstruct the past and point to the future.
 
A lot of newspapers could save a small fortune in indeed a single photograph could tell a story. No need for copy writers or photo essays.
A lot of newspapers are mostly just saving anyway, it seems. However, for me there is a difference between a story and the story a newspaper, or whoever, wishes to present. That is one reason there is a need for many things.
 
I didn't not vote disagree on this one.

A single picture may not tell the entire story, but it most certainly can tell a story.
 
Let's look at this from the other direction...can a story give us an image and will that image be exactly the same in everyone's mind...???
 
Not sure that I have ever recognized a story in a photo. But have seen photos that made a strong impact on me. I take photos of things that I find interesting colors or shapes, and confess once developed or downloaded I do not see what caught my interest.in a lot of them. The one thing I am sure about is I enjoyed taking each shot.

David
 
I put agree reluctantly, because it can make you wonder what is going on, as this one by Cindy Sherman:

tumblr_lfu9ebLche1qevoc9o1_400.jpg


Photo by Cindy Sherman.
 
I think a photo tells a story in the same way an MTF graph tells you about a lens.

just my opinion here, but a photograph captures vastly more information about a slice of time viewed in effectively 3 dimensions (thank you, brain) than we see but is completely ineffective at providing a information in either side of the photograph timewise. to me, it's really not that different than evaluating a graph at a certain point. the next point might flow logically from the slice you are examining or it might be completely disparate. at any rate, I find attempting to impose a narrative on a photograph to be a waste of my time, and I haven't found a person whose work I like that follows that philosophy, at least to my knowledge. If you are one of the 83% of the people who voted in the negative, I urge you to continue on. You probably like different photographers than I, and get something different out of photography. And you probably get more out of it than I do.
 
i disagree. pictures dont tell stories.

even Pulitzer Prize winning pictures dont mean anything without the little caption telling you whats happening.

for example, this image taken by Kyoichi Sawada:

http://i2.wp.com/listverse.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/3553432_640px.jpeg.jpg?resize=600,800

without the caption, the picture tells you very very little about what is happening. where? when? who? what? nothing is told. the only thing we see is a tank with the US logo on it and a man tied to it. anything you add from there is just your own assumption.

or this photo by Paul Vathis:

http://i2.wp.com/listverse.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/serious-steps.jpeg.jpg?resize=600,649

who are the men? when was this taken? under what circumstances? whats going on? there is absolutely no story told. you know what it looks like, but not whats happening.

“The fact that photographs — they’re mute, they don’t have any narrative ability at all. You know what something looks like, but you don’t know what’s happening, you don’t know whether the hat’s being held or is it being put on her head or taken off her head. From the photograph, you don’t know that. A piece of time and space is well described. But not what is happening.”

“I think that there isn’t a photograph in the world that has any narrative ability. Any of ‘em. They do not tell stories – they show you what something looks like. To a camera. The minute you relate this thing to what was photographed — it’s a lie. It’s two-dimensional. It’s the illusion of literal description."

and of course, we can agree to disagree. i think sometimes we put too much emphasis on things like this instead of the actual imaging making process, myself included.
 
Maybe a single image can hint at a story, but no, it cannot `tell' a story.A story has connected events . All the images posted as examples so far are images that have been seen often, we know the story, OR at least think we know the story. Also, your knowledge of the story may be very different from the next persons.Images from Vietnam [ad nausea] are perhaps the perfect example.
 
Didn't see the other thread.

Disagree in this thread, although the question and responses are unsatisfying, too simplistic.

IMO, a single, still photograph can suggest or illuminate/illustrate a story, but cannot narrate one. That is, a single still photo can encompass and/or provide emotional grist, epitomizing a story, but has insufficient information to articulate the narrative.

G
 
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