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