250swb
Well-known
An interesting discussion, but a moot one in a few years. Whether it is in five years or 50 years, 99.99 percent of photos (excluding an extremely niche group of photographers if film survives at all) will be shot with digital cameras. Discussions of whether photographs (digital or film) are accurate representations of reality are an anachronism and sound strange coming from modern folks.
We look fondly at old movies shot in Technicolor precisely because they don't look real (sitcoms shot with with digital cameras look "real" if you want an example of why we prefer Technicolor). Yet, we argue for the "reality" of B&W Tri-X. We are strange birds, indeed. 🙂
In any conversation its possible take a word like 'reality' and literally taken make a mockery of its use. I think in this case you could take a Thesaurus and assume that a few more could be used interchangeably with it, like 'belief', like 'authenticity', like 'tangibility'. The information on a negative is more open to scrutiny as regards it authenticity, and therefore perceived reality, than any digital file. The increase of information, processing, and user parameters do not make the digital fiile more real, but rather have the potential for increasing the gap between it and reality; to much is hidden and behind the scenes.
Yes we fondly look at Technicolor movies, but they looked super real when they were new, and because that reality was at arms length from the public it ensured the Indians remained the bads guys and everybody believed Hollywood wouldn't lie to them. On the other hand holding a negative of a holiday snap was open to everybody, and this innate understanding of 35mm film (and all mass market film) was what made Robert Frank's 'The Americans' the democratic antidote to Hollywood. It was something tangible and available because yes, everybody understood the boundaries of a negative or could at least narrow down the likelihood whether something was real or manipulated.
The problem with a digital image is that no matter how much you educate people in its techniques and tricks you are no nearer being able to prove or disprove the reality of the image as having been genuinely in front of the photographer in that form. You are not able to narrow down and prove the truth of a well crafted image. The last hope is to trust the photographer to tell you if the image is true to the world, or true to the truth in his/her head.
Steve