It's all about who you know not how good you are.
I hear this all of the time, but does someone know an example of a truly horrible photographer who is universally panned yet is making a living in photography?
It's all about who you know not how good you are.
Hmmmmm... Okay. Yes. You're right. If you don't want to do it, and your income doesn't depend on it, why bother?He seems to have had it with the current state of photography. When that happens, you either figure out how to make it "fun" again or you take a break until it becomes something you crave to do again. That's my opinion and may not work for others. I feel breaks are healthy sometimes.
Sorry to have written so much in order to ask this [simplified] question:
Is it just me, or does anyone else acknowledge/notice/care about the subjective, qualitative differences?
I realize I can continue to shoot film. I'm asking about others' appreciation for the photography as you practice it, and with you as the audience. No change? What you see from others still motivates and inspires you as much as it used to?
Hmmmmm... Okay. Yes. You're right. If you don't want to do it, and your income doesn't depend on it, why bother?
On the other hand, I'm not sure that I can imagine such a minimal interest in photography. As you say, "That's my opinion and may not work for others."
Cheers,
R.
Is it just me, or does anyone else acknowledge/notice/care about the subjective, qualitative differences?
Nice. My wife said this morning, "All the places I still want to go, and haven't seen, I want to visit 50 to 200 years ago." The places we dream of -- the South Seas, Egypt, wherever -- are the images that were constructed before we ever read or saw them, and they no longer exist. Do we actually want modern Lhasa, Tahiti, even Delhi (which I first saw 30+ years ago)?I'm about ten years older than you. My photographic career has been a very different journey from yours, but I find myself bored to tears with the majority of photography being produced today. I've thought about that a lot, and I'm convinced that the medium is irrelevent... digital or film... what's changed is the overwhelming amount of it; most of it poorly done. The "problem" with digital in general isn't that it's not "film" but that it's available to everyone, everywhere who then feels the need to publish every result every time they push the shutter release, or whatever serves as a shutter release. And then there's some blog or social media site that puts it out there. Very little is original any more. We're overwhelmed and overloaded with images... some of them even very good images, but because we're SO bombarded every day, it's tough to find the joy in them.
In the "old days" we waited breathlessly for Nat Geo, or Vogue, or Life, or Look and saw images of things we knew we'd likely never see in person. Big images. Some color, some B&W. They expanded our world. They inflamed our imagination. They somehow made the world seem challenging and somewhere we wanted to explore. We knew that those images were just the tip of the iceberg about what was really out there and we wanted to grab those experiences for ourselves.
For those of us in the U.S. mid-west, New York and L.A. seemed so cosmopolitan, and so exotic and romantic... London, Paris, Bombay, Cape Town... may have all been on Mars, but we got to see all those places through the lenses of the magazine photographers. And the images were stunning... or gritty... or whatever emotion they evoked... but evocotive they were! They all spoke of lives we could aspire to live... someday.
Today, we're bombarded with images. iPhone images... p&s images... poorly done images... if you want to see something, you just type the place into Google, and there are more images than you can stand to look at in one sitting. And most of them are, frankly, not worth looking at. We're overloaded... bombarded... tired of seeing them.
The old images still talk to us as they still spark those dreams. If they'd been digital they'd still have done that because they were new and fresh, and the world was challenging and exciting. That, is what I believe the problem to be. There are still amazing images out there. There are unexplored places. There are images yet to be made, but how to differentiate those images from from noise is what has become the problem. Places and fashion and art are all mundane because we're inundated with them. That makes images of places and fashion and art mundane because little is new and fresh any more.
Sometimes it's good to take a break for a while. Take the opportunity unload some of the noise... re-evaluate what you want to see, and then really begin looking again with fresh eyes.
Paul Cezanne said it best, my goal is to represent nature, not to reproduce it. The obsession with technical perfection is a dead end, because photographs can never be as big or as real or as three-dimensional as the real world. The problem with the pictures that leave you cold is that they are cold; the camera did all of the work, we learn nothing about the photographer's feelings.
There is a superb irony about photographing a homeless person with a Leica M9 to make a statement about the human condition. Yes, a statement has been made, and very strongly, but it has nothing to do with the photograph, and everything to do with cultural colonialism.
Great photographs are still being made, they are just not as visible because of all of the junk. The camera is a machine, and it is hard to transcend its "machineness", but it is not impossible if you are a sincere artist. I recommend Vilem Flusser's "Towards a Philosophy of Photography"; it's a concise, but challenging, look at how and why photographs acquire meaning.
It is always hard to pursue a truly creative path. It is full of uncertainty and risk, and the rewards are tenuous; it has always been that way. But what is the alternative if you really care? I never want to boldly go where every one else has been. Spare me the drunks, and the homeless people, and the street musicians. Show me something new.
It's a good start. What is better? And why? Warning: the latter question may be harder to answer than it looks...
Cheers,
R.
Nice. My wife said this morning, "All the places I still want to go, and haven't seen, I want to visit 50 to 200 years ago." The places we dream of -- the South Seas, Egypt, wherever -- are the images that were constructed before we ever read or saw them, and they no longer exist. Do we actually want modern Lhasa, Tahiti, even Delhi (which I first saw 30+ years ago)?
Cheers,
R.
Is it just me, or does anyone else acknowledge/notice/care about the subjective, qualitative differences?
I realize I can continue to shoot film. I'm asking about others' appreciation for the photography as you practice it, and with you as the audience. No change? What you see from others still motivates and inspires you as much as it used to?
Possibly. Did you try HEAVY orange filtration?Well, you're right, Roger. Even Ansel Adams' work, love him or hate him, can't be duplicated today because of air quality issues. I can't tell you how many times over the years in the '80s and '90s I tried to get a shot of Half Dome... and got haze instead. The world has changed, and although we may be more physically comfortable in many ways (at least in the industrialized nations) I'm not sure all of those changes have been for the better.
Possibly. Did you try HEAVY orange filtration?
Cheers,
R.
Point taken but I never cease to be amazed at what heavy orange or red filtration can do.It was mostly a function of particulate diffraction. Air standards were much more lax in the 1980s, and smog from the Bay Area and Sacto was blowing into the valley and piling up in those days. The valley even had smog alert days back then. Even 'clear' days had smog. It's probably better today than it was then.
Sounds like the OP needs a break from photography. It might be a healthy move. Outside of that, I fall in love with content first and processes last....That said, I'm fully digital and feel it's "perfection" and clarity is exactly its strength.
For those of you who hate digital, I gotta ask, are you a fan of photography in general or just in love with film?
The OP is responding (I think) to the tension between those who see no significance in process and medium, and care only about the "final product", and those who know that the process is an integral part of what is created. The process is where the "magic" lies.
This is a debate that appears on RFF in various guises, usually film vs digital, but also "real human relationship" vs social media. I think it is a central issue of our time, and I appreciate the OPs thoughtful take on this .
Randy
There are still amazing images out there. There are unexplored places. There are images yet to be made, but how to differentiate those images from from noise is what has become the problem.
Nice. My wife said this morning, "All the places I still want to go, and haven't seen, I want to visit 50 to 200 years ago." The places we dream of -- the South Seas, Egypt, wherever -- are the images that were constructed before we ever read or saw them, and they no longer exist. Do we actually want modern Lhasa, Tahiti, even Delhi (which I first saw 30+ years ago)?
Cheers,
R.