Charlotte Thompson
Well-known member
thank you Rachel
sometimes taking risks can be a good thing
Charlotte
sometimes taking risks can be a good thing
Charlotte
Charlotte, take this for what it's worth.
Years ago I walked into Galen Rowell's gallery in Bishop, California. First reaction, breathless wow, these are the most gorgeous pictures I've seen in quite a while. 45 minutes later, I'm thinking to myself "hell, I know where the saturation slider is in photoshop too". My question: Is your wild color effect going to make the long haul. Would you want it on your wall day in day out for 15 years?
Jim
what a great question! for that I may say I hope so for the art itself is a part of me and there are some parts I love more than others as we all do naturally-
my color is more than sliding a saturation point in photoshop- it is about balance in colors and dealing with original light in the original photo untouched- its about knowing IMO what works what doesn't-
what I do is a sort of color consideration that equals the ultimate expression of the newly born shot-
if it were so easy as just to slide saturation then I would be in Heaven, Easy Street
but I adore what I do and how I do it
I am learning more -evolve with each experiment I come up with-some may work-some may not
"art is the act of seduction"
Why would we even imagine that! Art is not (generally) meant to teach anything!I do NOT wish to change any person in their beliefs of photography but only let them see what I do
and whatever "real admired photograhpy is I have no idea
because that seems a "in the box statement"
That art is very different from the photographic genius of Ansel Adams or the other great masters. They observed, selected, excluded, position, left, returned until the light was right. They used intelligence, experience and knowledge (as well as genius) to embed esthetic coding into a scene. Then they worked thescene back, albeit, with their own artistic fingerprints fingerprints. They might well choose to deliver it "better" than seen in nature! That we accept. Here, however, you are showing it not better but distorted in color, form and instances. Your work, (and some of mine, I must admit includes), in not just designing but just finding an odd or wonderful effect in delivering your picture, will be questioned. After all, is in the end merely a non-serious gimmick? Isn't it an empty pretty vessel holding no real beauty?
Besides that, "getting there" will be trivialized as lacking the real effort and technical qualities of admired photography.
My response is as follows. It's indeed possible to create worthwhile art by departing from realistic photographic representation. Still, it needs time and revisiting for me to finally know what it is that's being delivered. (I apply the same questions to my own work for the last 5 years.) Is it a lucky mess or a result directed by the brains genius and talent.
Ultimately the work can only be judged by what happens to the observer.