Sejanus.Aelianus
Veteran
Polite programmers leave a Git repository, even when dropped from a project.
Alas, my experience puts "polite programmer" right alongside "military intelligence" and "honest politician".
Polite programmers leave a Git repository, even when dropped from a project.
@ Photo_Smith
The same arguments can be made about "traditional" modes of photography such as documentary:
"Why bother making the 'work'...? This isn't new exiting work we're seeing it's the same old stuff re-packaged...
What we are seeing is not a new understanding of the world around us its a repackaging exercise, more of the same... "
This kind of thing (practice) is quite common today. Many photo-arts people rip images and alter them very slightly in Photoshop and claim them as unique (under the law) and copyright them as their own. Some if this is done openly as “art” and a lot is done, not so openly, for profit – the resale of valuable imagery. The courts in the US have often sided with the image lifter and not the original image creator.
Much of the "remaking" of original art is just marketing .. "new and improved" as seen by the latest maker. If the art world/media buy it. It's pronounced "Art". See the early work of Jeff Koons.
http://www.jeffkoons.com
I'm afraid I'm not post-modern enough to comprehend how finding a finished photo counts as being a photographer.Joachim Schmid has been known as a photographer for three decades - since the 1980s - and has been widely published, and his work exhibited in many major international galleries and museums. But he doesn’t take photographs, instead he collects and displays other peoples’. He is particularly famous for his “found photography” work, where he picks up discarded snapshots - torn and ruined - from the streets and displays them: see reused snapshots.
The appropriation of Google images is a new - and relevant - conversation. It comments on our relationship with technology and the world, in particular the impact of the former on the latter.
Our view and understanding of the world is increasingly mediated by the camera and remote viewing, and the virtual is often more familiar than real.
Re. Szarkowski's "The Photographer's Eye" - many contemporary photographers consider his writings to somewhat restrictive: he was a confirmed modernist, and thought that photography should stick to what it does best. For example, he said that photographs are poor at narrative, so photographers should avoid story-telling. Prescriptive, no?
Other mediums - literature, cinema - may be better at narrative, but just because narrative is more difficult in photography is no reason to avoid it.
In short, Szarkowski is respected, but culture and how photography is used by and what it means to society have changed since he wrote his books - even if we assume that his views were universally accepted at the time (which they weren't).
As a final example, a writer overheard two teenagers flying for the first time:
People cannot understand how things were seen and understood retrospectively ... the Greeks at the time Homer (no not that Homer, the one in a frock) had no word for blue, if you read him you will find the sky described as "rosy fingered" or the sea as "wine dark" they had no concept of Blue, their eyes were, obviously, just like ours but the were not ready conceptually to understand what they were seeing.
I expect when some poor sod tried to say "actually the sky is blue" lots of folk through up their arms and shouted their disagreement .... in a forum too, I expect
Happy Xmas to everyone!