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blue gate


Some thoughts here from Teju Cole, writing in his book of essays Known and Strange Things, from an essay on Gueorgui Pinkhassov. Cole has also recently produced a book called Blind Spot, a beautiful combination of words and photographs. Both are well worth getting hold of.
“380 billion photos were taken in 2011, and about 10 percent of all the photographs currently in existence were taken in 2012. Amateurs with Canon cameras and overpriced L lenses have something to do with this; even more culpable is the incessant and overwhelming production of camera-Phone images by huge numbers of people.
There are good reasons to be suspicious of this flood of images. What is the fate of art in the age of metastasised mechanical reproduction? These are cheap images; they are in fact less than cheap, for each image costs almost nothing. Photo processing is easy and rampant: beautiful light is added after the fact,depth of field is manipulated, nostalgia is drizzled on in unctuous tints of orange and green. The result is briefly beguiling to the senses but ultimately annoying to the soul.
But the problem with the new social photography isn’t merely about photo processing: after all , photographers have always manipulated their images in the darkroom. The filters that Hipstamatic and Instagram provide, the argument goes, are simply modern day alternatives to the dodging and burning that have always been integral to making photographs. This argument is partially true. But the rise of social photography means that we are now seeing images all the time, millions of them, billions, many of which are manipulated with the same easy algorithms, the same tiresome vignetting, the same dark green wash. I remember the thrill I felt the first few timesI saw Hipstamatic images, and I shot a few myself, buoyed by that thrill. The problem is not that images are being altered—it’s that they are being altered in the same way: high contrasts, dewy focus, oversaturation, a skewing of the RGB curve in fairly predictable ways. Correspondingly the range of subjects is also peculiarly narrow: pets, pretty girlfriends, sunsets, lunch. In other words, the photographic function, which should properly be the domain of the eye and the mind, is being outsourced to the camera and to an algorithm.
All bad photos are alike, but each good photograph is good in its own way. The bad photos have found their apotheosis on social media, where everybody is a photographer and where we have to suffer through each other’s “photography” the way our forbears suffered through recitations of terrible poetry after dinner. Behind this dispiriting stream of of empty images is what Russians call poshlost: fake emotion, unearned nostalgia. According to Nabokov, poshlost “ is not only the obviously trashy but mainly the falsely important, the falsely beautiful, the falsely clever, the falsely attractive.” He knows us too well.
————
I don’t wish to begrudge anyone his or her pleasure: it’s no bad thing that everyone is now a photographer. We can be the curators of our lives, and can record every banal moment if we wish. And indeed, why not?Nevertheless, in looking at a great photographic image from the past or the present, we know when blood is drawn. We know that some images, regardless of medium, still have the power to enliven us. And we know that these images are few. Not all 380 billion images a year, not 1 billion of them, not 100 million, not one million....”
“380 billion photos were taken in 2011, and about 10 percent of all the photographs currently in existence were taken in 2012. Amateurs with Canon cameras and overpriced L lenses have something to do with this; even more culpable is the incessant and overwhelming production of camera-Phone images by huge numbers of people.
There are good reasons to be suspicious of this flood of images. What is the fate of art in the age of metastasised mechanical reproduction? These are cheap images; they are in fact less than cheap, for each image costs almost nothing. Photo processing is easy and rampant: beautiful light is added after the fact,depth of field is manipulated, nostalgia is drizzled on in unctuous tints of orange and green. The result is briefly beguiling to the senses but ultimately annoying to the soul.
But the problem with the new social photography isn’t merely about photo processing: after all , photographers have always manipulated their images in the darkroom. The filters that Hipstamatic and Instagram provide, the argument goes, are simply modern day alternatives to the dodging and burning that have always been integral to making photographs. This argument is partially true. But the rise of social photography means that we are now seeing images all the time, millions of them, billions, many of which are manipulated with the same easy algorithms, the same tiresome vignetting, the same dark green wash. I remember the thrill I felt the first few timesI saw Hipstamatic images, and I shot a few myself, buoyed by that thrill. The problem is not that images are being altered—it’s that they are being altered in the same way: high contrasts, dewy focus, oversaturation, a skewing of the RGB curve in fairly predictable ways. Correspondingly the range of subjects is also peculiarly narrow: pets, pretty girlfriends, sunsets, lunch. In other words, the photographic function, which should properly be the domain of the eye and the mind, is being outsourced to the camera and to an algorithm.
All bad photos are alike, but each good photograph is good in its own way. The bad photos have found their apotheosis on social media, where everybody is a photographer and where we have to suffer through each other’s “photography” the way our forbears suffered through recitations of terrible poetry after dinner. Behind this dispiriting stream of of empty images is what Russians call poshlost: fake emotion, unearned nostalgia. According to Nabokov, poshlost “ is not only the obviously trashy but mainly the falsely important, the falsely beautiful, the falsely clever, the falsely attractive.” He knows us too well.
————
I don’t wish to begrudge anyone his or her pleasure: it’s no bad thing that everyone is now a photographer. We can be the curators of our lives, and can record every banal moment if we wish. And indeed, why not?Nevertheless, in looking at a great photographic image from the past or the present, we know when blood is drawn. We know that some images, regardless of medium, still have the power to enliven us. And we know that these images are few. Not all 380 billion images a year, not 1 billion of them, not 100 million, not one million....”
Billathon, kiiti, Fi Webster, Berny and 14 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Steve Bucknell club has replied to Richard NuttallSteve Bucknell club has replied to The Limbo Connection clubThe book was Volume II of The Essays of Michel de Montaigne. (Translated by Charles Cotton), published by George Bell & Sons. 1893.
Thanks for dropping by LC.
"In looking at a great photographic image from the past or the present, we know when blood is drawn."
To me, this is the crux of the matter. I don't mind my friends posting photos of their lunches on Facebook. After all, I have a choice to look at them or not. Then, every once in a while, someone posts something striking. Like your photo above, Steve. It's not striking because the blue is accented. It's striking because the perspective is inverted and inventive and not something I've seen before, and it makes me smile and reflect.
Thanks for posting your images and thoughts.
Steve Bucknell club has replied to Sarah P.Cole then writes: “I’m drawn to this poetic notion of photography, and I think Frank’s idea is what Pinkhassov, too, is after. He tries to foster the double take of seeing.”
I like that idea of the double take of seeing.
One of the things I like about Ipernity is that it gives you a small selection of other people’s photographs to look at, so it’s possible to search out those images that strike you in some way, rather than feeling overwhelmed by the superabundance of photography elsewhere on the net.
He's using a functional approach to art -- art increases arousal, the approach of the psychologist D. E. Berlyne. You don't have to dig too deep into this assertion to realize that no photograph will increase arousal in everyone. I find Cole's photographs bland, derivative, and often poorly composed, but others admire them and more power to them. Neither of us can be wrong if a good photograph is one that enlivens us. Cole's photos enliven them but not me.
I think he is especially wrong about the range of subjects -- it is not narrower now, but astonishingly broad. I can see excellent photographs on image-sharing sites that in the old days would never have been allowed into print or galleries.
Photography has continually been refreshed by vernacular photography. The Kodak camera introduced photographers to new types of composition. William Eggleston's approach to photography was affected by the machine-developed photos he used to look at while waiting for his colour prints at the lab.
Photography has become democratic. An official taste can no longer be imposed on photographers. The fact that you don't like most photos doesn't make all photographs valueless.
I like your photo because it's mysterious and makes you think (about what the blue symbol (?)...uh, letter (?...uh, /wha? means. The blue is striking, too -- that is, it enlivens me. Now Cole and I are on the same wavelength.
Steve Bucknell club has replied to John FitzGerald clubAnd he is excited (and intimidated) by the ways that the new technologies available to us all create opportunities for new ways of seeing and exploring the world.
His tone is very patrician at times! He sounds like a latter day Oscar Wilde dropping his bon mots from on high; but he fizzes with enthusiasm and ideas and it’s fun to be on the ride with him.
The photograph that’s been in my mind’s eye recently is Portrait of Space, by Lee Miller, which I saw at an exhibition of her work in the Hepworth, Wakefield. It caught me by its starkness, yet it also felt welcoming, a way through, a mirror, an emptiness. Lots of words started to pile up in me, hopelessly vague and pretentiously struggling. But I know what I like! But have I been conditioned to respond in this way to something I know has already been validated as Art? There’s still that moment when something stops you, makes you make a comparative judgement. It’s the pleasure of being in a gallery, or looking through the images here on Ipernity, trying to decide “which is my favourite? and “ why do I like that rather than this?”.
It’s a matter of taste, which I think you’ve said before John. What is taste? I suppose you lick it and see, but it helps if you lick lots of other things so you have comparisons. I don’t know where I’m going with this!
Where is that discussion we had a while ago on similar topics? I’d like to see it again but I lost track of its whereabouts. It would be interesting to look at it again.
Many thanks again John. I certainly have your way of seeing the world in my mind as I walk around in any cityscape nowadays. I’m curious, jealous and always intrigued by the photographs you make.
I suppose I value my own “taste”, my “take on things” and like to compare my view to the views of others. I guess that’s one of the things Ipernity does: sets up hierarchies of taste. The more stars and comments the better. That’s one way we have fun here, and there are other ways too!
John FitzGerald club has replied to Steve Bucknell clubI was reviewing a lot of my old photographs today, looking for shots of my neighbourhood for a local project, and I was astonished at how bad they were by my current standards. So at least I'm both improving and getting a better sense of what I'm trying to do. Which of course is why you do photography.
I wiill look for Mr. Cole's book now. Thanks.
Steve Bucknell club has replied to John FitzGerald clubBy the way, Steve, your blue gate keep you standing! It's a strong gate!
Steve Bucknell club has replied to Armando Taborda clubThe gate’s solid steel, Armando. You could stand a crane on it and it wouldn’t buckle.
Armando Taborda club has replied to Steve Bucknell clubMe, I particularly loathe selfies. Other considerations aside, people invariably look stupidly pseudo jovial in them. Or plain stupid.
Not quite sure what your picture means, though. Stepping over boundaries? Two feet in the gates of digital Hell? Light, please!
Steve Bucknell club has replied to dolores666 club“Two feet at the gates of digital hell” sums it up perfectly.
Steve Bucknell club has replied to Trudy Tuinstra clubSteve Bucknell club has replied to Tim Lukeman clubSteve Bucknell club has replied to Dutt ChanggleI once took a photo of a cup of cappuccino, but deleted it soon afterwards. The thing about digital photography is that usually it requires no aforethought. My first comparatively useless dig. camera at least made me click the shutter button, whereas before I'd look through the viewfinder and think , "No, this view isn't good enough for me to pay for the processing," and so I most probably missed some interesting photos. One has to be selective, delete the dross take a good look at what's left. At last I have learned to do that. ;-)
Dutt Changgle has replied to Amelia clubSteve Bucknell club has replied to Dutt ChanggleSteve Bucknell club has replied to Amelia clubTaking a photograph must be a mix of seeing and thinking and feeling, deleting and preserving....
I like the way you imagine “the skier”! That’s exactly it. A kind of Eddie the Eagle. Steve the Eagle? It has a certain cachet, if that’s the right word.
I'm not a photographer. I'm a cut-paper collage artist, But I respond strongly to Nabokov's poshlost concept. I always look at my collages in graphics software before I post them, and I recognize that impulse to skew the hues, to oversaturate, to make them cornier, more "pop."
Part of that is a good thing. I've only been making art for eight years, and I'm in my sixties, so I don't take my work very seriously. I want to retain my sense of humor, while striving with each piece to learn a little, get a little bit better.
But part of that poshlost urge is taking me in the wrong direction. I recognize that.
Anyway, thank you Steve, for the blue gate tennis shoes photo, which keeps unfolding more joy, and for the wisdom in this conversation...
Steve Bucknell club has replied to Fi Webster clubI intend to follow your practice, not take the work too seriously, retain a sense of humour and work to get a little better. Thank you.