Is Photography Art?

Art is everything that invokes emotion in the viewer/consumer of it. Hence anything and everything is art.

The "value" of art in economic terms is based on other variables: rarity, perceived value, marketing, etc.
 
Well, according to the philospher Baruch Spinoza... yes, it (the artistic object that was created but not sold) still would be art:

Definition of Art : Any human creation which contains an idea other than its utilitarian purpose.

Apparently art can be created, but be unseen and unappreciated and still can be art. But an advertizing layout, no matter how seemingly artistic it may be... cannot be art.
 
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trittium said:
I think this is on track, but some art is not ment to elicit enjoyment. Some is made to be thought provoking and cause a questioning of society, some is ment to make you feel unconfortable, and some is ment to make you cry. Art is made to cause an emotion, makes you react, or think. Good art appeals to a wide range of people, so that everyone can be stirrred by it.

Right you are... substitute "emotion" for enjoyment.
 
BrianShaw said:
But an advertizing layout, no matter how seemingly artistic it may be... cannot be art.

This is one of the criteria for the german VAT on art, if you work on assignment it is not art. So some artist developed a great skill for doing just what the customer before he ordered it 😉

And then an advert, say a picture off a can of tomato soup, can be art! At least as far as taxes are concerned.
 
I. Definition of Art : Any human creation which the dude on "Antiques Road Show" says is worth a lot of money.
II. Definition of Art : Anything which I like.
III. Definition of Art : Any which my wife likes.
 
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Socke said:
This is one of the criteria for the german VAT on art, if you work on assignment it is not art. So some artist developed a great skill for doing just what the customer before he ordered it 😉

And then an advert, say a picture off a can of tomato soup, can be art! At least as far as taxes are concerned.

Volker,

are you saying that if it's work for hire then there is no tax on the artwork but if I sell a photograph at a show it's considered merchandise and I have to charge VAT?

R.J.
 
tkluck said:
I. Definition of Art : Any human creation which the dude on "Antiques Road Show" says is worth a lot of money.
II. Definition of Art : Anything which I like.
III. Definition of Art : Any which my wife likes.
You forgot these:

IV. Any which investors think can give a nice return.
V. Any which nobody understands anymore to know that it isn't art (i.e. "functional" items like the so-called Aztec Calendar or Andy Warhol's toupee)
VI. hanged, any which by being they instantly become (i.e. Appleby's decor)
VII. What the Supreme Court says it is by the mere fact of knowing that it is.

😉
 
peterc said:
Art is whatever someone will pay money for so that they can display it. It becomes great art when other people also want it and offer more money.

Peter

Photographs made by dead photographers are worth more for some reason. Burning your negatives in a fireplace also helps increase the value of your prints.
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R.J.
 
Socke said:
This is one of the criteria for the german VAT on art, if you work on assignment it is not art.
Mozart and Haydn wouldn't have had many tax breaks. Haydn did have many off-shore accounts, though 🙄

Edit: and yes, I'm aware that Austria is not Germany, but back then it was one huge big "empire" in the middle of other kingdoms' way.
 
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To me photography is both a documentary and artistic medium. The debates about the definition of art are timeless and endless. I don't worry too much about the definition as I know when a photograph speaks to me.

For a photographer to become recognized as "important" I think he/she must establish a portfolio of serious work in a particular photographic genre and style. For example, Eugene Atget, Weegee, W. Eugene Smith, and Diane Arbus all had different and distinctive personal styles, as well as massive portfolios. The New Orleans photographer E.J. Bellocq is now famous for his "Storyville Portraits" of prostitutes, but his recognition came long after his death. His fame rests on one rather small documentary project, but it has a unified and coherent theme. There are many serious amateur photographers who produce wonderful images, but I doubt many will be posthumously recognized as being "great" .... unless they have produced a significant portfolio on a theme of importance.
 
photography is art as soon as you look twice

when you "frame" the shot, it's art

when the end result is to capture a message of some sort - when it could have a title, then it is art.

Reportage, snapshots, shooting pictures of your house for sale. Those are not art, generally. Though, there are different breeds of reportage.
 
The 'art' family is a diverse one. It is futile to seek for one particular class of characteristics that discern the artful from the artless, for there is always going to be some member of the art family left out when we would like to include it too. It will be best to try to capture the meaning of art by allowing a flexible description, one that picks out 'family resemblances', i.e. characteristics common to many other members but not necessarily all.
 
BrianShaw said:
Apparently art can be created, but be unseen and unappreciated and still can be art. But an advertizing layout, no matter how seemingly artistic it may be... cannot be art.

What about the work of Toulouse-Lautrec? Lots of advertising posters.

Art is what sets us apart from animals. Whether it's good or bad [art].
 
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Tarzak said:
What about the work of Toulouse-Lautrec? Lots of advertising posters.

Art is what sets us apart from animals. Whether it's good or bad [art].

I didn't write that definition... I just quoted a philosopher.

Sure, T-L is definitely art (if you will allow me to ponitificate). He, and others like him, go beyond simple depiction of a product. One of the characteristics of "artistic commercial art" that can raise the product to the level of "true art" is the rendering "beyond utilitarian". There are many advertisments of everyday products that are truly artistic. There are many advertisments of everyday products that are not. It's easy to see the difference. But the same is true about all types "potentially artistic" media.

Another characteristic to consider, especially with commercial art, is it's ability to sustain the test of time. Real art is often those images that etiehr become classic or become representative of a specific era. Looking twice may not be a sufficient test. There are many bad images that all of us have looked at twice, thrice, and maybe even more than that... only to conclude that it is just plain ugly. There must be a "WOW" factor.

I have a bit of a problem with the notion of "ugly art". There is some that I personally don't like, but I can see why others might be attracted to it. Yes, it's ugly (or not pleasing, for example opera) TO ME, but not to a large range of others. I suppose even opera is still art... whether I like it or not 🙄

There are other forms of 'art' that I can't be so enlightened about. Some consider XXX porn to be artistic expression. Sure, I've looked at some of it more than twice and some of it has raised some emotions (to say the least). Sure, some of it is rendered somewhat artisticlly and is enjoyed by many. But does that make it art?

Are Jock Sturges photos art... or are they artistically rendered documentation of a particular lifestyle? I like some of his work... but some looks just like a common snapshot (except that it is shot with 8x10 camera). What about David Hamilton... same genre, but perhaps more artistic given the "dreamy soft-focus" and the attempt at depicting youth is a "timeless" manner. I'm not sure.

And.. what about shooters like Larry Clark? His work certainly evokes emotion and is a unique perspective on life, but what's so artistic about it. Certainly not anything related to artistic rendering or good printing. I consider it to be photographic documentation, but others consider it to be art. Go figure. Contrast Clark's photodocumentaries with Mary Ellen Mark... very different. Which, if either, is art?

Just because one uses the same tools as artists might not qualify the resulting product as art. Using the analogy of an earlier poster... there isn't anything I might do with either an acoustic or electric guitar that will ever be art... but in the hands of Segovia or Geo. Harrison it is!
 
Oldprof said:
To me photography is both a documentary and artistic medium. The debates about the definition of art are timeless and endless. I don't worry too much about the definition as I know when a photograph speaks to me.

For a photographer to become recognized as "important" I think he/she must establish a portfolio of serious work in a particular photographic genre and style. For example, Eugene Atget, Weegee, W. Eugene Smith, and Diane Arbus all had different and distinctive personal styles, as well as massive portfolios. The New Orleans photographer E.J. Bellocq is now famous for his "Storyville Portraits" of prostitutes, but his recognition came long after his death. His fame rests on one rather small documentary project, but it has a unified and coherent theme. There are many serious amateur photographers who produce wonderful images, but I doubt many will be posthumously recognized as being "great" .... unless they have produced a significant portfolio on a theme of importance.

BTW, the 1978 film Pretty Baby was based on Bellocq's life in New Orleans.

R.J.
 
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