Everyone sees and thinks differently. What one person sees as art, others will see as junk. It doesn't stop it from being art and it doesn't stop it being junk. It's just how I see it that counts personally with what art is to me.
Captured a guy in mid air about to land in a puddle. What if he had captured that shot a little later, as the foot touched the puddle, as the splash began, or later? Then it's not art?
That describes a photographer using a camera to make an image on a glass plate, film or image file.
Music doesn't use technology? Musical instruments, microphones, amplifiers, recording devices, processing and editing apps aren't technology? You've heard of a WAV file, right?
Dance doesn't use technology? The instruments, amplification and sound systems used to create the soundtrack for the dance aren't technology? The lights used to illuminate the dance stage, the lighting grids, modifiers and dimmer boards used to design, focus and manipulate light during a dance performance aren't technology? The custom-designed and manufactured clothes, costumes, and footwear worn by dancers weren't made using technology?
The floors upon which dance is performed, the theatrical venues, the materials used during construction, the tools used in the design of these elements aren't technology?
Literature doesn't use technology? The Gutenberg printing press, manufactured paper, ink pens, typewriters, computers, and word processors aren't technology?
Presumably, you would have no problem with a DaVinci sketch passing your bizarre "technology" threshold. How about a digital stylus and drawing tablet?
In other words, you're the only human allowed to decide what is and isn't art. That's legitimately a God complex.
Yup, definitely a God complex. It's interesting to actually see one personified and active.
Danny, you're free to hold any opinion you choose. I am as well.
If I expressed the opinion that Michael Jordan is the worst basketball player of all-time, I'd be roundly skewered as a fool by most every fan of the game and especially by those who saw Jordan play.
How do you suppose the sports world would react if someone seriously proposed that Michael Jordan wasn't even a basketball player? Would such a claim even merit serious consideration?
My point is that the question, "Can photograhy be art?" isn't as preposterous as the statement that Jordan is the worst basketball player of all time. It's as preposterous as a statement denying Jordan was a basketball player.
We have a 150+ year history of photography being considered as art. It's a history that includes photographs being lauded as great works of art. Artists, curators, critics, collectors, and historians agree. By what other standard should we consider the question?
I'm not denying that individuals have the right to form and hold their own opinions. I'm simply acknowledging the reality that history treats certain opinions with much higher regard than others. In the context of this discussion, the question has been answered.
Not only can photography be art, it is art and some photographs are great works of art. That's what history has and will record.
Black and white, wide angle lenses, telephoto lenses, barrel distortion and fisheye, starburst, blur from shallow DOF, movement, or corner softness, flash, polarizing filter, infrared filter, noise, macro magnification. These are all distortions of reality for the photographer to decide upon even before they even pick up the camera. And of course there are many more decisions during post-processing and printing stages. To say that photographers merely "capture something already there" and reduce the entire medium to the press of a shutter button just shows ignorance of photography. The ongoing debate here is not about the definition of art, it's about the definition of photography.
As this roller coaster rounds another turn, allow me to quote a genuine master of the art of the absurd as that appears to be where the ride is taking us...
"But after all, we must remember that art is art. Still, on the other hand, water is water isn't it? And east is east and west is west. And if you take cranberries and and stew them like applesauce, they taste much more like prunes than rhubarb does. Now uh... now you tell me what you know." — Groucho Marx, Animal Crackers – 1930
At 3am this morning, when I couldn't sleep, I thought "I think Lee Jay may be right".
Why?
Well, think about music. That can be art (like betthoven), but the CD itself isn't art. It's what it plays. In the same way, a photograph itself isn't art, it's what it shows. So, the art is physical object (scene, person, flower etc.) and the photo is just recording that - including any changes (fisheye, composition) that the photographer wants to add in.
So, what you holding your hand (if you've printed it) is a piece of paper. What is on it is a representation of the art that the photographer wants to show.
Of course, in the fullness of daylight, it makes less sense 😁- but I can see where Lee Jay is coming from.
This argument would apply to any other form of art. According to this line of thinking, the painting is not the art, it's just a representation, a piece of paper. The original scene is the art.
Which is nonsense. The original scene is the original scene, not the art. Congratulations, you've just argued away the exist of all art!
What makes a piece of art, art, is that it is a representation. The representation is the art because the artist has filtered the original scene through her unique vision and applied her own view/interpretation in representing in a way no one else has (at least ideally).
People are really over-thinking this now: there is a subject, the artist represents that subject through their own creativity. The result is art (might not be good art, but that's subjective). Photography is just the same. The photographer interprets the scene is front of them and produces a representation. Some people might argue that if the representation it too literal a representation and you can't tell it from the scene itself, it's a photocopy, not art. But in the majority of serious photography, the photographer filters, interprets the scene is some way and gets that interpretation down as a representation. That's art, whether good or bad art.
no we dont. just ask a painter if photography is an art. they would laugh at you. like most trained musicians . they think all the modern midi recorded music is crap and fake. its not art. photographers think negative space is art LOL and weird is not art, its weird. i have a friend who thinks his photography is art. one competition the judge asked whos demented image is this he was judging 😂and it was. it was demented it wasnt art it was taken by a sick individual.
Your eyeballs are fisheye lenses with angles of view of over 180 degrees and horrible "corner softness" outside an angle of about a degree.
The above would imply that HCB's images aren't art because they are taken with a 50 and pretty much straight printed (B&W though). Do I have to use some sort of "distortions of reality" for photography to be art?
I like this photo. It's nearly an out of camera jpeg. Is it art because I find it aesthetically pleasing or not art because it's not distorted in some way?