R
ruben
Guest
Thardy said:Which photo did your daughter critique?
http://www.rangefinderforum.com/photopost/showphoto.php?photo=73065&ppuser=1179
Thardy said:Which photo did your daughter critique?
photogdave said:.....Bottom line, I think anyone wiling to post their images in the gallery should also be willing to accept any kind of criticism in good spirit.
antiquark said:There's a difference between self-censorship and being polite!
so trueM. Valdemar said:The view count is a pretty good indicator of public acceptance of your work.
Of course, a photo of a naked woman will rack up thousands of views, no matter what the quality.
With the rise of the internet, we have tens of millions of daily self-published images, blogs, writing, etc etc.
Most of it is increasingly illiterate and incompetent.
What the internet sorely lacks is a strong cadre of editors. I'm not so sure that the ability of the hoi-polloi to freely express and publish itself is a good thing.
Jocko said:I doubt that self-censorship is really our worst enemy, but I am sure that self-criticism is our best friend. No-one could critique my work more harshly than I do, and the same must be true of any serious photographer. A positive comment is not simply a gift an.d reassurance - it is a message to ourselves, because what we admire in the work of others is that which is lacking in our own. Thus such encouragement is genuinely useful to all concerned.
RFF reminds me of classical Athens - a few people of exceptional merit rise to prominence, but everyone is ultimately equal. Indeed, as in ancient Greece, those who aspire to tyranise the polis end up ruling a kingdom of one. We have no teachers, prophets or oracles. We are all learners, and from my experience in education I would argue that fraternal praise tempered by modesty and self-knowledge does more good than all the critiques on earth.
Cheers, Ian.
raid said:Ruben,
There is a difference between saying: "This photo is a piece of crap. Why embarass yourself here." and between offering an honest crititique that is not positive in nature. I would accept the second but not the first approach.
example from the gallery: "absolutely insignificant image of a familiar moment of autor, no composition, no care." This commenter then went on, adding an attack on the gallery as a whole by stating that only friends are cheerleading. It ended with "It is much sad and depressing".
This was not withing a critique session of a posted image.
All I could comment on this comment was "get a life".
The above illustrates a personal attack for no reason at all. The commenter could have stuck to critiquing the image and not start an attack at the way gallery photos are being commented on and then end it with "depressing". When we have a few RFF members with such insensitive and reckless attitudes onboard, I fully understand how some people become gallery shy.
The problem is how do you 'teach" a few isolated adults some basic rules of commenting so that people stay awsay from person insults and instead offer some constructive criticism.
raid said:example from the gallery: "absolutely insignificant image of a familiar moment of autor, no composition, no care." This commenter then went on, adding an attack on the gallery as a whole by stating that only friends are cheerleading. It ended with "It is much sad and depressing".
This was not withing a critique session of a posted image.
All I could comment on this comment was "get a life".
The above illustrates a personal attack for no reason at all. The commenter could have stuck to critiquing the image and not start an attack at the way gallery photos are being commented on and then end it with "depressing". When we have a few RFF members with such insensitive and reckless attitudes onboard, I fully understand how some people become gallery shy.
aizan said:it's not just a matter of skill level, but also ambition.