Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/08/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]What's all this nonsense about photos or music being "realistic"? Discussions of photographic reality tend to obscure the fact that ALL photographs are abstract representations of an external world. When Margaret Mead showed Tahitian natives black and white photographs of themselves and their village, they rotated the photos this way and that, shook their heads, and handed them back. "Nice designs", they said, "but what are they?" Mead then realized that photographs were such abstractions that only long experience enables their interpretation. Closer to home, your dog or cat does not jump into the TV screen to frolic in the fields shown in the Alpo commercials. Neither does it growl or flee from the TV intruders in your household. The image on TV is not the real world to the animal but a flickering pattern on an illuminated tube. We see the image as a depiction of reality because our intelligence and experience enables us infer the scene from its abstract representation. The animal does not. If you think your photographs are realistic, I suggest this Turing test for photography. Take a photo looking out a window of your house, preferably one with a nice view. Make the best possible print you can of the negative, then hang it on the wall next to the window. If a visitor to your house cannot tell the difference between the view out the window and the picture of the view out the window, you have a truly realistic photo. The obvious limits to the simulation of reality are inherent in the photographic process which represents a three dimensional moving scene as a two dimensional static image. Lens resolution, color fidelity, contrast compression are just a few of these limits. Motion picture and three dimensional photography remove some limits but add others. Printing and reproduction processes add still more. Someday holographic images may pass the photographic Turing test, presenting three dimensional, moving, full color scenes directly to the eyeball indistinguishible from actuality. Until then, assertions of reality by photographers are like assertions of virginity among whores. Larry Z - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html