I have a tendency to agree with the quote, more than I disagree. I think that there is a "skill" to seeing or reading a photograph, and that a lot of people don't have that skill. I think it's more a willingness to "see and read" an image, to look at it for meaning, and that's something that stems from critical viewing. It sounds elitest, and there's probably no way to take this position without sounding that way, but it has a lot to do with education, and educating oneself.
You learn to look at images critically, in a critcal setting, which most often occurs in an "educational" environment. This is where you learn to look at images, to see them, and you do that by looking at a LOT of images, breaking them down, studying them. It's the same for any art: painting, scuplture, filmaking. Take a film appreciation course or seminar, and you will never "see" film the same again. You won't see the same film as the "uneducated" person sitting next to you.
Take a wine apprecation class, and wine will take on new and different dimensions. Not a lot of people have studied photography, created images, put them up for critique, participated in a critique, or visited a gallery to look at photographs. It's not that far-fetched to suggest that most people don't know how to read an image. It's not a slight against those people, nor is it an elitist position.
Most people don't know how to read a balance sheet, an accountant can, because he/she studied accounting. Most people couldn't plane a piece of wood, but a carpenter can. I couldn't do either without training, but I'm not offended in the least. I've got very little appreciation, or desire to understand opera. I don't know how to understand or appreciate (read) it. Other people do. I am uneducated regarding opera.
For most people, the only images they see are on their calendar, in magazines, coffee table travel books. They're not looking at those images critcally, any where near what happens in educational environment, or even what we do here in our gallery.
There is a skill/ability/apprecitation, and it is learned.
🙂
.