I have always viewed photography not only as non-art, but as anti-art. That is the approach I use for most of my photography. I watch these landscape photographers on YouTube, they are always searching the most beautiful and unique location in the mountains or by the sea, and set up their camera on the tripod and patiently wait for the most dramatic skies and the most dynamic lighting before they finally press the shutter for that one special shot.
My approach to landscape is the opposite, searching for the most banal and ugliest neighbourhoods in the city, and then I just walk around and quickly point and shoot dozens or even hundreds of photos under the most dull lighting conditions possible. Other photographers try to make the most alluring photo, I try to make the most repulsive photos. I just want to rub the viewer's face in their own vomit and force them to look in the mirror.
I see other photographers complain when their local art gallery cancel a planned exhibition of their work due to the gallery's anti-photography policies, but as a photography I wear that as a badge of honour. Even if an art gallery actually accepts photography, my photos will never be the ones that will get displayed their walls, or anyone's wall for that matter, and that is my goal and what guides me as a photographer. I think that is exactly what makes photography as a medium special compared to other potential mediums of art: how easy it is to capture the most unpleasant, everyday things immediately and realistically with so much detail, the very things that people don't want to see or be reminded of.