Jocko
Off With The Pixies
lZr said:Some people looking at Daly's art in his presense said: "You are very talented man". He said with anger: "I am not talented. I am genius!" Was that conceit?
Not necessarily
It's only conceited if one claims to be a genius and is not!
Cheers, Ian
Sparrow
Veteran
Good to see you back Ian
regards
regards
Jocko
Off With The Pixies
Hallo Stewart! Thank you! It's good to be back
Cheers, Ian
Cheers, Ian
Finder
Veteran
Pablito said:Aesthetics is for artists what ornithology is for birds. (Barnett Newman)
Wonderful!! I have to use that!!!!
Paul Jenkin
Well-known
You could ask, "is imitation a limitation"? I'm not suggesting that any of us (and certainly not myself) could improve on what has been done by others - so why try?
I think a comment earlier in the thread said that imitation is self-educational. I agree. There are times, I've wondered 'how did he/she do that' and have experimented.
However, if it's such a trademark technique that you're trying to emulate - such as Man Ray's solarise portraits, everyone will say "that looks just like a Man Ray photo". Is that a compliment or a put-down?
There are a lot of new-school photographers of whose photos I ask "why did you bother doing that" and nothing would make me want to emulate their style or content. And yet these guys are feted as being original and ground-breaking. A tale of the "King's New Clothes" perhaps? Who knows?
I'm happy ploughing my own furrow. If I happen to accidentally bump across a defined and recognisable style - be it my own or akin to a recognised "master" then so be it. However, I think there's enough room out there for us not to tread on each-others' toes too often.
I think a comment earlier in the thread said that imitation is self-educational. I agree. There are times, I've wondered 'how did he/she do that' and have experimented.
However, if it's such a trademark technique that you're trying to emulate - such as Man Ray's solarise portraits, everyone will say "that looks just like a Man Ray photo". Is that a compliment or a put-down?
There are a lot of new-school photographers of whose photos I ask "why did you bother doing that" and nothing would make me want to emulate their style or content. And yet these guys are feted as being original and ground-breaking. A tale of the "King's New Clothes" perhaps? Who knows?
I'm happy ploughing my own furrow. If I happen to accidentally bump across a defined and recognisable style - be it my own or akin to a recognised "master" then so be it. However, I think there's enough room out there for us not to tread on each-others' toes too often.
40oz
...
Sparrow said:Is imitation the sincerest form of flattery?
Or is plagiarism the worst of all thefts?
why can't they both be true? Are there serisouly people who can't distinguish between an homage and plagiarism?
craygc
Well-known
Whether imitation is flattery, plagiarism or anything else cant really exist as a standalone question with a definitive answer. It falls into the same category of questioning like "which camera or lens is best?". It really depends on why something is/was emulated and to achieve what.
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