The term you're all groping towards is
'vernacular' photography, which is a bit more useful, since the term
'snapshot' is overloaded and emotionally-charged now, both amongst the intelligentsia and the plebes. I am actually rather fond of the British term, '
happy snaps'.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vernacular_photography
From my point of view, I admit to being rather confused as to what art is, anyway. So the concept of the vernacular photograph as art doesn't rattle my cage too much. Call it art, call it not-art, either is fine with me. I like vernacular photography, especially that of the USA. The one thing that it is not, which art normally is, is intentional (generally). Vernacular photography is by its nature a work product, not an art product. It is not intended, in the general sense, to be viewed as art, to be discovered as art, to be appreciated as art - not even family vacation photos of the Grand Canyon or the Stuckey's on Route 66 in New Mexico.
However, over time, vernacular photographs can come to have different meanings, and some of them approach or circle around the term 'art'. A social and historical document, they have meaning as statements of their zeitgeist, the frozen moment of bell-bottoms and platform shoes or post-WWII suburban growth, perhaps. An unvarnished look at who we are or who we were, it is unpretentious and unambiguous, even if we find some aspects to be laughable in a culture that never saw kids take vacations to visit 'dude ranches'.
Yes, I like snapshots, and sure, they're art - to me, at least. But I'm a Ruralist, so what do you expect?
