Simplicius wrote:Bounty wrote:Maybe this discussion is better off getting split into the Photo Talk thread? If only there was an AMP moderator here...
Hold your horses, man; these replies take me a long time to finish.
Ride a pony?
The Grim Squeaker wrote:Then what's the point of making young hot models sign various legal forms before they come into my...studio?
Not quite sure what your punchline was meant to be, but potentially really unfunny.
Sex with photomodels joke
.
Actually, something that matters would be more the field of documentary or news, history, photography and less about art IMHO.
Matters to them, personally, I meant. Beethoven's Symphony V doesn't matter much in any absolute sense, really - but if someone listens to it and is absolutely transfixed by the music, if it moves them to heights of emotion above what they feel on a daily basis, then that is one argument in favor of it being art.
That matches my definition though, not "something that matters".
. And mattering to someone personally is tricky, a lot of people like Britney Spears and very few appreciate Peer Gynt or Dvorak's new world by comparison, does that make one a better form of art?
...an area being photogenic and photographed just means that it's easy for you too make excellent shots (just not exceptional ones).
...but not this. Think of the Taj Mahal. It's a beautiful building. It is not hard to make a pretty photo of the Taj Mahal. Lots of people have done it. So many, in fact, that it is very difficult to make a photograph of the Taj Mahal that is worth caring about. It will be pretty, but
so are everyone else's photos of the Taj Mahal. All the good angles have been covered, all possible lighting conditions have been covered, and there will be no reason for your picture even to exist except for your self-satisfaction.
Actually, I have seen some excellent original photos of the Taj Mahal. (Even of the Statue of Liberty, from a docking container for example).
But yes, it is extremely hard, especially when you're travelling and don't live there and you're dependent on the local weather and you don't have the time to visit at the "magic hours" for example.
On the other hand, people have been trying to make imitations of Ansel Adam's work in Yosemite for decades using GPS trackers and satellites to get the exact location, weather and time of day, and his originals still reign supreme
.
To be good, excellent, worthwhile, etc. - to an audience - you have to bring something new to the table. Unique and unusual are the watchwords; they've seen all the Taj Mahal pictures already.
Still, there's something to be said for documentation - an excellent accurate picture through your POV. (Unusuality for it's own sake is a tempting fruit, but can lead to cavities for those who indulge in it, excessive photoshopping and overly blurred shots too greatly).
It could be worse, your state is how many times larger than my country?
About four times larger.
Only? Well, 2/3 of mine is uninhabited desert, with large chunks being problematic to visit
.
There are advantages to living in a small place, though: there are parts of Maine that I've never even been, because to really canvas them would require a trip of many days, and money for lodging, etc. One-quarter of the state would still be a sizable chunk of land to cover, but I could do much more of it in day trips.
Yup. Are you still a ship's cook? That's absolutely perfect for travelling around, the only thing that could possibly be better would be to be a proffessional photographer in terms of travel. (Even pilots aren't as good, they're more limited in locales
).
More like modern art. A rotting donkey corpse? Picture of a baby with it's brains smashed out?
Yes, those too. And Duchamp's urinal. And Chris Burden lying in a gallery under glass for 45 hours until someone gave him some water. The art may fail, or it may just be in poor taste
If your definition is based on impact (not people liking it, or thought provoking, or inspirational), then it's hard to argue with those art examples. Impact is impact.
- the gallery and the museum are just places for people to see it, not some final judgment that It Is Good. But it's no less art than the stuff everybody likes. It all operates on the same mechanism of trying to provoke an audience reaction, whether it's pure emotional abstraction (Beethoven) or world-class trolling (Duchamp).
As I recall provoking a reaction is only the definition of modern art, but I might be wrong, i've never taken an art class in my life. (and never will the way my coursework is piling up).
Just because I could, Google wrote:
the creation of beautiful or significant things
Art is the process or product of deliberately arranging elements in a way that appeals to the senses or emotions. It encompasses a diverse range of human activities, creations, and modes of expression
The definition and evaluation of art has become especially problematic since the early 20th century. Richard Wollheim distinguishes three approaches: the Realist, whereby aesthetic quality is an absolute value independent of any human view; the Objectivist, whereby it is also an absolute value, but is dependent on general human experience; and the Relativist position, whereby it is not an absolute value, but depends on, and varies with, the human experience of different humans.[1] An object may be characterized by the intentions, or lack thereof, of its creator, regardless of its apparent purpose. A cup, which ostensibly can be used as a container, may be considered art if intended solely as an ornament, while a painting may be deemed craft if mass-produced.
I could check my sister's textbooks for a better definition (something about how pure art is something done for only it's own sake, and not for any other purpose)