"You’ve got to deal with how photographs look, what’s there, not how they’re made."
"Photos have no narrative content. They only describe light on surface."
"Photographers mistake the emotion they feel while taking the picture as judgment that the photograph is good."
-Garry Winogrand.
Ding! Ding! Ding! Ding! We've got a winner!
Amen to that.
It
is about the image, maybe not
all but essentially is does boil down to exactly that.
All the gear we used is just a tool. The way we use these tools and the moment we press the shutter to capture
a certain moment in time gives the result (after some polishing in dark or light room...).
As much a I love to use my Leica stuff (and Zeiss and CV lenses for M), the equipment doesn't take a single image.
I am deciding what to frame and when to shoot. Knowing how to use my stuff indeed helps and you might need
to know a little more than with an "auto everything" toy but essentially it is the photographers eye and vision that captures an image.
And as others have said if the image is crap, all the other information does not make it better.
If a major art work, painting or photo goes to the auction block, then marketing comes up with all the background
what the artist had for dinner before he went on to produce this unique piece ...bla bla bla.
Yes, sometime the background info might be interesting but the message is in the image.
Does anyone care about the type of oil paint used in a Monet or Van Gogh (other than a restaurateur or expert to examine authenticity)?
A friend of mine once said to me :
"If you have to explain your image, forget about it."
He was right.