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Michael Grace-Martin

~ Photography, Art & Life

Michael Grace-Martin

Category Archives: Commentary

Cult of Photography

01 Tuesday Oct 2013

Posted by mgm in Commentary

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There seems to be a sort of ‘Cult of Photography’ wherein photographers (both long-time practitioners and enthusiasts) blow the importance of photography way out of proportion and will even let it ruin their personal/family lives. Photography is a tool, not some shimmering path to immortality or a stand-in for religion.

— (9/27/13 on my Facebook page)

I enjoy photography. But I have always found blind, single-minded adherence to a set of values by a group of people to be a warning sign indicating I should keep my distance or risk losing my objectivity and open-mindedness.

For me, photography is more than a hobby but less than a religion. Photography will not “show me the way” to salvation or whatever.

Photography’s proper place in my life is as a tool of my mind. The power is not in the practice of photography; the power is in the practitioner’s mind.

Photography does not suddenly transform someone into an artist. Photography does not give you something to say, it’s just a means for visually-oriented communication. You still have to come up with the “thing” to say.

This notion that by having a camera in your hand you can happen upon a masterpiece, become famous and be set for life is totally a fairy tale. It’s one of the reasons so many people take up photography but then quit when they find out it’s not that easy.

Many see photography as an easy way to make art. So now the world is inundated with people making digital photos they hope will be seen as art, thereby conferring on them the title of “artist”.

I recently saw an interview with an artist talking about Cindy Sherman’s work (Cindy Sherman is one of the most successful photographers of our time). He said that Sherman’s success is all about the work she does in creating her characters; the photo is just the way of recording her work; the “magic” is what she does in front of the camera, not behind the camera (where she never is anyway).

Photography doesn’t magically give you something important or artistic to say. The magic is in your mind…and that’s what you should be working on (i.e., the contents of your mind; your thoughts) if you want to create works of any consequence.

 

 



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Role of Context and Tangibility in Art Appreciation

20 Friday Sep 2013

Posted by mgm in Commentary

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appreciation, art, context, digital, tangible

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One aspect of art appreciation that I think may be quite important is Context: the context in which you are viewing a work of art.

The Internet has made works of art (especially two-dimensional art) accessible to millions of people on their computers and other digital devices they typically own. Much art viewing is happening in this electronically mediated context.

So the viewing context is the computer or device screen/s that people use to view art, and also: websites, email, weather reports, word processing documents, cell phone snapshots, etcetera. A computer or digital device is a general viewing (and listening) platform for the communication of digital information; it is not specialized for viewing art. So the art gets “mixed in” with all the other digital information perused on one’s computer and/or digital device.

Compare this experience of viewing art with seeing it at a gallery or art museum where the environment affects and becomes part of one’s perceptual and emotional experience of the art. Even a coffee table book brings more “context” (e.g., the cover: its design, material and texture) to the viewing of visual art than does a computer or other electronic device. Sure, a website can provide some design surrounding the display of the artwork; but in most cases, backgrounds are best kept neutral or plain white or black so as not to take away from the appreciation of the artwork; this doesn’t leave much “context” except for the viewing device itself.

Related to the context (and somewhat bound up with it) is the tangibility of the artwork. The physicality of the artwork too affects one’s experience of it.

On one end of the spectrum is an ephemeral, slightly flickering (e.g., at 60 Hz or whatever…fast enough so you don’t consciously notice) digital image that goes away when you turn off your computer or electronic device. Sure, you can bring it back onto your screen when you click the power switch back on; but it’s clearly not a permanent physical element in your environment.

Contrast this with a 4 ft X 6 ft framed photo or painting on a wall that you can get up close to and see the details of the brush strokes or paper texture, the sheen off the print/glass/frame, the depth of the frame and its texture, its distance from the wall, its weight (if you have the opportunity to touch or hold it), and so forth. This object has a true (possibly commanding) physical presence and will decay and interact with its surrounding environment like any other physical object. This is an artifact, not just a momentary pattern of pixels.

Now, it seems likely that good and/or inspiring art is likely to show through regardless of the viewing context–whether on a PC monitor or at MoMA. However, I think few would argue that the environment in which artwork is viewed or the physical qualities of the artwork itself has no impact on the viewer’s psychological or emotional response to the artwork. Making a trip to an art gallery or museum is a clear signal to one’s senses that something special is happening–that you are somewhere other than home or work or on your commute–where a less than everyday experience is a possibility and should be prepared for and expected. The same with opening a beautiful new coffee table book that contains engaging printed images.

A human being’s intellect and finer sensibilities are not totally removed from their physical nature. People respond most (best?) to art that is also physically present. Maybe its a feeling of kindredness, I don’t know; but people seem to feel closer to something that shares their physical nature–maybe because it more fully engages their senses?

The importance of context similarly points to the relevance of multiple dimensions or sensory inputs regarding a human being’s experience of art: artwork is not experienced in a sensory vacuum, and whatever “surrounds” the artwork is inevitably part of one’s experience of it.

So, have art galleries and museums and physical prints and paintings lost their value and soon, all two-dimensional art will be viewed primarily on digital devices?

I think it would be pretty tragic because I suspect the value of art itself in peoples’ lives would decline and an important source of inspiration and enlightenment would be lost from peoples’ lives…and they may not come to realize it until the availability of physical art dwindles to the point of being hard to find.

 

 



Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

The Devaluing of Photography and a Need for Innovation

06 Friday Sep 2013

Posted by mgm in Commentary

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photography, value

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When almost every electronic device out in the world–and almost every person has an electronic device; most have more than one–can take photos, then of course, the value of photography goes down. In general, photos have become less precious (unless it’s a special photo of your great grandmother–or similar–where there’s only one physical copy, for example). “Preciousness” is inextricably bound to scarcity.

The value of a photo as “artifact”–or in digital form, an image–has plummeted because there are so many of them. The mere existence of a photo or image is not very special in and of itself.

So we turn to the actual content of the photos since the currency of a photo itself is no more special than the existence of some printed words (for example).

Along with there being so many photos, there are fewer and fewer types of content that aren’t represented adequately or (more typically perhaps) in excess.

For example, when Sally Mann was taking romantic and moody black & white photographs of her children, few mothers were doing the same. Now, some huge percentage of mothers (some fathers) have cheap or expensive DSLRs and sets of purchased Photoshop filters, Lightroom presets, and/or other computer software that make their photos look similar to those Mann masterpieces (assuming they take enough photos–which cost no extra once you’ve got the digital photography equipment–to happen upon a few standouts).

The same with street photography: Henri Cartier-Bresson’s work looks almost passe amongst the current sea of thousands of street photos published daily on the web.

Older established photographers sometimes try to make a case about their work still being special because they’re still shooting film (e.g., using medium or large format film cameras that *very* few people use or know how to operate) or because they don’t have to shoot thousands of images to get their “keepers” that you, the viewer, end up seeing.

The problem is: the viewer doesn’t really care about process. A viewer (who isn’t a photographer) doesn’t care how many shots it took to get the few great ones on display. And while the use of film does have some effect on the look of the final image, almost any film quality can be emulated by a computer–at least nearly so–and probably close enough for most non-photographer viewers. Furthermore, the current quality of the images produced by digital cameras–even non-professional DSLRs–is good enough to produce high-quality prints; digital images are even commonly preferred by professional photographers for larger prints.

Ultimately, it’s not process or expertise that will make a photographer’s work stand out: it’s cleverness and creativity. The imaginative photographer will go beyond replicating the past. Being proficient or expert at doing (emulating) the photography of the past may be a necessary step in one’s evolution as a photographer, but it’s fatal in today’s photography climate as an endpoint–unless your goal is simply to be an accomplished photographic craftsman for hire.

To be a successful “photographer artist”, being expert at producing beautiful photos of flowers, sunsets, landscapes, art nudes, etc or Bresson-esque (or Winogrand-esque or Frank-esque..) b&w street photos isn’t enough to stand out and make photography a lucrative endeavor: there are too many others doing the exact same thing.

 

 

 

 

 



Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

When We was Fab

13 Saturday Jul 2013

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computers, humor, writing

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I was going through boxes of my old things tonight and happened upon an article I got published back in March of 1989 in a magazine called ComputorEdge (based in San Diego and still going strong online).

It was supposed to be a humorous geek-like article, and I think I at least succeeded in the latter…:p. (By the way, you may notice it’s published under my old last name: “Wich”; also, get a load of the “floppy disks”–oh, memories…)

Here’s a scan of it:

Download (PDF, 1.39MB)



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The Diluted Eye

10 Wednesday Jul 2013

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critical eye, overshooting, photography

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You shouldn’t overshoot. It’s like over-eating, over-drinking.

This was from a “lost” (until recently) interview done with Henri Cartier-Bresson back in 1971. C-B’s explanation was that “over is too much, because by the time you press, you arm the shutter once more, and maybe the picture was in between”.

He basically said that photographers should spend more time “seeing” than shooting…and I wholly agree with that. I think his explanation for “why” may substitute a practical reason for a more insightful one.

I believe part of being a photographer is developing a critical eye. A “critical eye” means an effective mental mechanism for knowing when a good or interesting photo opportunity is present. Such a “critical eye” is developed through experience…the experience of having taken both effective and ineffective photos, and learning what elements or factors were present that led to the effective ones.

I think there’s a worse repercussion from indiscriminately taking photos than not being ready to take the “good” photos: it’s disconnecting the process of taking/making photographs from intentional or calculated seeing.

When critical seeing and the act of making photos get disconnected, you get a flood of mediocre and/or “garbage” photographs. And having lots of mediocre or garbage photos around you tends to “dilute” your critical eye and torpedo your self-confidence as a photographer (e.g, you may start thinking you don’t have “it” anymore–that you’re “washed up” and so forth). You end up with a diluted eye.

There are two important parts to effective photography:

  1. developing and maintaining a “critical eye”
  2. securely connecting this “eye” to the act of taking and then (later) editing your photos

Typically, photographic magic doesn’t just happen, you have to make it happen.

People can get lucky taking thousands of photos and ending up with a few winners. But making photographic success into a numbers game doesn’t reward skill; it rewards sheer physical effort and expensive equipment that can acquire a huge number of frames/sec. It’s no wonder that people sometimes credit a photographer’s success with the quality and price tag on the equipment s/he owns.

Critical seeing is a reward in and of itself because it’s a recognition of something good happening, whether you happen to have a camera to capture it or not.

Connect this recognition with the act of photographing, and you’ve got a partially controllable and rewarding means for communicating ideas and perceptions as a skillful and able Photographer.



Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

New Twitter Account: mgmsbrain

02 Tuesday Jul 2013

Posted by mgm in Announcements, Commentary

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mgmsbrain, tweets, twitter

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If you’re a Twitter user, I set up a new Twitter account and you can follow my tweets if you’d like! My Twitter “handle” is mgmsbrain, and you can connect to it over here.



Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

Photography More than Taking Pretty Pictures

30 Thursday May 2013

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photography

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Knowing how to operate a camera (and photography equipment in general) is getting lower and lower on the list of obstacles one must overcome to  become a successful photographer; just above that is knowing how to take “a pretty picture”.

You want to be a successful photographer beyond the hobbyist level? Study human psychology, art, and marketing. Also, learn how to edit your stuff.

The other thing that helps me–not sure if this is true for everyone–is being able (or least trying) to explain my photographic goals, projects, and scenarios in words.



Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

Photography and Imagination

10 Friday May 2013

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embellishment, imagination, information, partial, photography

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When a human has partial visual information about an object (including living “objects”) or scene, their imagination tends to fill in the missing information. Sometimes their imagination fills out the picture in a positive way (e.g. toward something they yearn for), and sometimes in a negative way (e.g., toward something they loath or fear). Being aware of this and “testing” a scene with one’s own imagination (to see if it’s particularly apt for imagination embellishment) is a big part of being a photographer, I believe.



Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

My Creative Goals in a Nutshell

24 Wednesday Apr 2013

Posted by mgm in Commentary

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artistic, goals

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My main goal for my photography and my writing (for that matter) is to improve my experience of life. It’s really that simple.

Sure it’s pretty self-serving. However, I believe others potentially benefit from:

  1. a happier Michael Grace-Martin, and
  2. in as much as others’ values and perceptions overlap with mine, they may find something of value in the stuff I create that I find of value (an unproven theory to be sure…:p)

 



Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

The New “Art” of Posting Photos Online

11 Thursday Apr 2013

Posted by mgm in Commentary

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art, online, photography, posting

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Taking and posting photos online is like riffing on a musical instrument. It’s more about a distinctive, engaging and dynamic stream of stimulation than it is about capturing and focusing on one particular static object or moment.

It’s a new art form borne of the digital age: the Art of Posting Photos Online.



Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com!

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