jwc57
Well-known
Hopefully I've put this in the correct section of the forums. I'm on an art show committee and there was a rather heated disagreement between myself and an art teacher about photographs--and digital enhancement. I'm hoping to come here for some insight into what you folks think.
Here is the background....
At last year's show, an entry that got second or third in still life, was a composite of a man standing on an apple. I had voiced my belief when it was entered that it didn't belong in still life, nature, or people--it was more graphic arts or creative design. I brought this up again at a meeting last night and an art teacher said that all digital photographs are digitally enhanced and that photo was no different. I once more disagreed and he continued that adjusting contrast, levels, saturation, B&W conversions are all digital enhancements and because of that photographs today are not any different than the man standing on the apple photograph.
My point to him was contrast, saturation, burning, and dodging were no different on a computer darkroom than that from a wet darkroom--and that twenty years ago, even film based composites were in separate categories from landscape, people etc. The chairman has decided three of us should work this out by next Monday's meetings.
Does he have a point? Should composites and manipulated photos just be considered the same as straight photos that have been adjusted in a computer? I shoot raw, so everything I do has to have some adjustment for sharpness, contrast, color correction, etc. I feel those things are no different than choosing different films and/or papers to affect the outcome of the final print.
Thoughts? Thanks.
Here is the background....
At last year's show, an entry that got second or third in still life, was a composite of a man standing on an apple. I had voiced my belief when it was entered that it didn't belong in still life, nature, or people--it was more graphic arts or creative design. I brought this up again at a meeting last night and an art teacher said that all digital photographs are digitally enhanced and that photo was no different. I once more disagreed and he continued that adjusting contrast, levels, saturation, B&W conversions are all digital enhancements and because of that photographs today are not any different than the man standing on the apple photograph.
My point to him was contrast, saturation, burning, and dodging were no different on a computer darkroom than that from a wet darkroom--and that twenty years ago, even film based composites were in separate categories from landscape, people etc. The chairman has decided three of us should work this out by next Monday's meetings.
Does he have a point? Should composites and manipulated photos just be considered the same as straight photos that have been adjusted in a computer? I shoot raw, so everything I do has to have some adjustment for sharpness, contrast, color correction, etc. I feel those things are no different than choosing different films and/or papers to affect the outcome of the final print.
Thoughts? Thanks.