[Leica] Is photography art?
Montie
montoid at earthlink.net
Mon Mar 23 09:17:35 PDT 2015
Interesting observation regarding art classification, or just
beautifully crafted horse manure...hard to say.
Montie
>>>Is photography art? I depends on whom you ask. I serve as an art
critic for several New York state regional newspapers and have plenty of
opportunity to visit art and photo shows. Artists, critics and show curators
have an implicit hierarchy of visual art roughly arranged in inverse
relationship to the utility of the effort. Fine art is art with no apparent
purpose except its own being. It is nice to look at but no one NEEDS fine
art. At the top of the list are the painters who work in oils, next are the
watercolorists followed by those who work in collage. Near the bottom of the
list are etchers, printmakers and photographers. Indeed some curators refuse
to let photographs be exhibited in art shows at all, consigning them to the
purdah of photo shows.
Lower on the list, in a separate category, are the applied arts.
This is "art" with some functional use. The work of most photographic
professionals, especially those whose pictures adorn magazines,
advertisements, newspapers, etc. fall into this category. Architects are
applied artists too, differentiated from sculptors because buildings have a
use apart from being merely decorative. Commercial artists are clearly
applied artists no matter how good their work. I know whereof I speak. I
live in Westchester near the border of Connecticuit and advertising and
commercial painters and photographers are as common as dust mites.
At the bottom of the list are craftsmen. Crafts are artistic
creations with a utilitarian purpose. It takes just as much skill to design
a Barcelona chair or fabricate a fine pair of shoes as it does to make a
painting except it is not considered "art." Most art venues will simply not
exhibit crafts except during the holiday season where they hope to make a
lot of sales.?
For the last 50 years I have had a grasshopper weathervane fastened
to the chimney of my house. It is a beautifully crafted sculpture of
hammered copper made by the descendants of the very craftsmen who made the
similar weathervane that adorns Faneuil Hall in Boston. If polished and
exhibited as art it would be accepted by almost any art show but as a
weathervane it has a function. It is not considered art but craft. I.e not
acceptable as "art."
The curse of photography (and etching and printmaking) is its
reproducibility. Copies of the work can be made virtually identical to the
original except not bearing the fingerprint of the artist. This caps the
appreciation value of the original. There is a financial virtue in
destroying the plates or negatives. While some photos can sell for a lot of
money, the highest price paid for a painting is 60 times the highest price
paid for a photograph. See Wikipedia for comparative pricing.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_most_expensive_paintings
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_most_expensive_photographs
Those of you that consider photographs fine art remember that
amongst artists it is considered a pretend art. A pseudo mechanical (OK
digital) process of capturiing an image. At best it is an applied art.
All of which reminds me of that old joke:?A young man buys himself a
boat and a Captain's hat. He says to his mother, "Now I'm a Captain."
His mother responds "You call yourself a Captain and I call you a
Captain. But do real Captains call you a Captain?"
Larry Z (a highly educated and reasonable photographer)
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