Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/03/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 9:07 AM -0800 3/30/05, Douglas Herr wrote: >Steve Barbour <kididdoc@cox.net> wrote: > >> taking vs making... >> >> <http://www.luminous-landscape.com/essays/making-images.shtml> > >Photography cannot convey truth; truth is a continuum of time and >space while a photograph is a limited view of a fraction of time. >Photography is an interpretation of truth that can convey >understanding. Meyers' space probe data example is appropriate here >because the data the probes relayed to earth had to be interpreted >in order to be understood. > >In making an image Meyers is showing us how he interprets the scene >in front of him, or how he understands it if you will. The >photographer's task is to include in the picture the elements of >truth that promote his understanding while excluding those elements >of truth which are marginally useful (or distracting) to his >understanding. > >IMHO there is no such thing as 'taking' a photograph because the >photographer, in choosing a particular view or moment in time, is >making decisions about how the photograph should look. > > >Doug Herr >Birdman of Sacramento >http://www.wildlightphoto.com Well said, Doug. 'Pictures' of any sort are an abstraction. If you are not trained in looking at two dimensional representations, they will not convey anything the maker intended to you. Early on in photography B&W became the standard through lack of ability to do colour. In most of the art world, B&W is a sketching tool, or a technique of convenience when colour is too cumbersome. Some B&W developed its own course, but colour was the ultimate goal in most cases. Egytian and Greek statues were painted and very colourful. Sculptors who worked in the 'classical' idiom in the renaissance and later didn't necessarily colour them because they took as inspiration statuary that had its colour washed off over the centuries. After colour became practical and inexpensive, it became the standard in photography as well, but due to the long development of a B&W aesthetic it has continued as a significant sideline, but it is just as much a personal translation of the data as the data from the space probe. 'False colour' photos show us things we don't ordinarily perceive; B&W is 'false colour'. For journalistic purposes we have been trained to accept and interpret a certain subset of image making as appropriate, for the wider range of image making this subset does not apply. Neither is the 'truth' nor 'honest'; they are only honest to their own standards and withing their own interpretations. Documentary and journalistic photography (not the same thing) demand certain standards be met to be successful and accepted, but they are hardly the standard bearers for what is 'photography'. Photography is making images with light, and says nothing about how the result is achieved or what manipulations are allowed. Truth is not to be found in photography. If someone holds up a photo and says: "This is the TRUTH", then he is lying. If someone holds up a photo and says: "This is what it looked like at the moment I took the picture, except the scene was really in colour, and that flare spot didn't exist in reality, and you could really see into those shadows that are totally black here, and you could really see the detail in the hilights and there was an elephant present which you can't see 'cause I didn't have my 21 with me, and that blob at the back was Mr. Smith but he's out of focus due to my having to shoot at f/2" then he's being more truthful. -- * Henning J. Wulff /|\ Wulff Photography & Design /###\ mailto:henningw@archiphoto.com |[ ]| http://www.archiphoto.com