I don't recall ever seeing much art that doesn't involve some for form of technology. Maybe the most ancient charcoal drawings on a cave wall. But at some point people started creating tinted "paints" using the primitive technologies they had. And tools for carving. And making papers, brushes, canvas, etc. etc.
As a pianist (which I am, very badly) I have a digital piano which I connect to my computer. I can then record my bad attempts at creating music. I can then play it back (later on a decent hifi system, maybe) and decide if what I thought I'd composed was actually any good.
How is that different from me looking through a viewfinder to determine what I think would be a good "artistic" photo, clicking the shutter and then reviewing it (later on a large monitor, maybe) and deciding whether I was right or not?
So, I put it to you that photography can be art, in the same way that music can be art.
Thanks - I feel like that's a big help in understanding your point of view on art vs. non-art. However I'm afraid like it gets increasingly unclear with the example and the statement below:
People are always welcome to decide what they like, and don’t like. However, this question is pointless and moot because photography has been firmly established as art for over 100 years. Just because someone comes up with a novel thought, or doesn’t agree, doesn’t change the facts. Flat-Earther’s claim to believe that the Earth is flat, and they will argue their point however, simple photographic analysis from space, not to mention firmly established circumnavigation throughout the centuries, has proved otherwise. So, anyone who engages in an argument, or debate regarding photography as art, or earth is flat, is doomed to a pointless waste of time.
Would that mean a reproduction, in the form of something like a print of a photo, or a watercolor painting, or charcoal drawing, etc not art? If I purchase a signed, numbered, limited edition print has that ceased be art? Is a robot copying an existing object different in some way?
I don't have an absolute answer to those questions.
The shape of the earth is a matter of objective reality and thus not subject to opinions. Assigning activities to groups is a human creation, not a matter of objective reality.
It is a true statement that there are many people who know more about art than I do. Expertise in art is a specialty field like any other.
I know what I like, and what affects me with a particular kind of response (attract/repel/indifferent). I may or may not agree with said expert but that does invalidate their expertise.
It's entirely different. In one case you are creating the music, the tech is just recording it. Would you call the recorder an "artist"? If you create the scene, that creation is the art, the recording of that scene is not.
Someone writing a play or a novel or a poem uses as word processor to get their thoughts captured as bits. Does that make them less of an artist? These days, people writing music can use MIDI keyboards and Notion. That that make them less of an artist? Many music performances now partially come from a computer. Does that make them not art? Sculpture is made with all manner of technology, including chain saws and CNC.
What is already there is just the starting point for a photograph. And for some photographs, there was nothing there to begin with; think Man Ray.