The Art of photography

(Steven Felgate) #1
The

PrinciplesatWork

InPursuitof

Excellence

Overthealtarofa

churchinVenicehangsaRenaissancepaintingthatis

clearlyamasterpiece.For 100 lire(lessthanthepriceofa

packageofciga-

rettes),atouristcouldputonearphonesandlistenastherecorded

voiceofan

artcriticexplainingthesignificanceoftheworkannounced,"Thisisthegreat-

est

paintingintheworld."Sucharecklessstatementmighthaveledthe

knowledgeabletouristtoaskforhis 100

lireback.Andyet,despitethefact

thatworksofartcannotberankedonanyabsolute

anduniversallyaccept-

ablescale,likediamondsoreggs,judgmentsofartisticmeritarecontinu-

allybeingmade.

Thephotographer,wheneverhelooksthroughhisviewfinderorexamines

hisnegativesinthedarkroom,mustchooseone

picture
out

ofallthepossibili-

ties;hemustbeabletodecidewhichexposuresarebetterthanothers—and

understand,intuitivelyorlogically,why.Ifhecannotemployprinciplesofpho-

tographytorecognizeexcellence,hecannevermakeagoodphotograph


except
by

luck.

Thisbookhasapproachedthedifficultquestionofgaugingsuccessinpho-

tographybyexploringtheprincipaloptionsinvolvedincreatingapicture.Ev-


eryobjecttobephotographedcanbeanalyzedforanumberofcharacteris-


tics.Itmayexhibitoneormoreofthebasiccomponentsofvision—suchas

shape,texture,formandcolor—andthecomponentscanbearranged

within

thepictureframetogeneratevisualinteractionsthatsuggestsuchqualitiesas


balance,rhythm,proportion,dominanceandsubordination.Inthehumorous

photographofaParisiancafedancerontheprecedingpage,forexample,

AndreKerteszemployedthecontrastsbetweendarkandlighttomakean


abstractdesignatthesametimethattheyfocusattentiononthedancerand

thepiecesofsculpturethatflankher.Thewittyparallelsbetweenthedancer's


poseandthesculpturewerealsodeliberatelysetuptocreateasenseoffun,

satirizing
theexaggeratedshapesandgesturesofthestatues,forarrange-


ments
ofvisualelementscanbe(andgenerallyare)manipulatedtoshowa

certainresponseonthepartofthephotographer—thatis,hisinterpretationof

themeaningofthesubject.


Thephotographer
also

may
indicatehisintentthroughhisrepresentationof

asenseof


time—acleverlyseizedinstantofaction,forexample,orarandomly

chosenmoment—orhemayachievehispurposebyhisbasicapproachto

photography,choosingeithertheorthodoxideaofphotographs
as

small,flat

objectsthatdepictreality
by


recordinglight
on

film,
orsomenewerscheme

such
asscratchingonrawfilm,aprocessthatdoesnotdependonlightand


disregardsreality.


All
theseconsiderationsareanalogoustoamapofphotographicpossibli-

ties.Thephotographerwhoisawareoftheregionsdescribed
by


thismapis

muchmorelikely
toreachhisgoalofexcellencethantheonewhoproceeds
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