blindly
intotheunknown.Themapcanindicate
ausefulwaytoadestination,
eventhoughitcannot
set
an
exactcourse.
Thehistoryofphotography
isfullofattemptstospecifymorepreciselythe
bestcoursefor
makingpictures.Twoofthemostprominent
schoolsofthought
have
beentheso-calledpictorialistandpuristapproaches.
Thepictorialists,
whoexertedagooddealofinfluenceduring
the19thCentury,heldfixedopin-
ionsaboutwhataphotograph
shouldshowandhowitshouldbeshown.They
sharedtheartistic
conceptsofpaintersoftheirtime,andtheycouldbedown-
right
vehementininsistingontheirtenets;forexample,in 1 859,FrancisFrith,a
leadingEnglishlandscapephotographer,advised
abeginnerthat
"if
hebe
possessedofagrainofsenseorperception,[he]will
neverrestuntilhehas
acquaintedhimselfwith
therulesthatareappliedtoart...andhewillmakeit
hisconstant
andmostanxiousstudyhowhecanapplytheserulestohisown
pursuit."Thepictorialistsbelievedphotographsshouldhaveadramaticcenter
of interestandshouldbeastastefulaspaintingsandprints ofthe
time,
leading
theviewer'seyethroughtheimagein
a
livelymanner,
butallthesamegivinga
comfortablefeelingofstability.
Theyalsohadstrongopinionsabouttheideas
tobeconveyed,preferringmythologicalthemes,sentimentalvisionsoffamily
life,idylliclandscapesandothersubjectmatterfarremovedfromeveryday
reality.Andtheirtechnicalprocedures—employingsoft-focus lenses,hand-
manipulatedprintsandmanyothertechniques—
made
their
imagesunlike
thoseofnormal
visionbutmuchlikethoseinpaintings.
Thepurists,reactingtotheexcessesofthepictorialists,adoptedacom-
pletelydifferentsetofcanons.Theyinsistedthataphotographshowwhat
humanvisionwouldseeundertechnicallyidealconditions:everythingperfect-
lysharpandclearlypositionedin
space
(humans
donot
normally
seethatway.
ofcourse,anymore
thanthey
normally
seethe
fuzzy,
sweetvisionsofthe
pictorialists).Techniquesthatbroughtsuchresultsinfluencedcontentandin-
terpretations;thepurists'portfoliosarefullofsweepinglandscapesthatdelin-
eateeverytextureandtone,andcalmportraitsthatrevealeachporeinthe
subjects'faces.
Boththepictorialistand
puristapproachesyieldedgreatpictures.Their
sys-
temsofphotographyworked,becausegiftedcreatorswereabletomeldvisual
ingredients,meaninganddesignintointelligible,concertedwholes—regard-
lessofwhichsetofrulesthephotographerchosetoworkwith.Theportfolioof
picturesonthefollowingpagespresentsanarrayofrouteschartedacrossthe
mapofoptions.
Hereistheartofphotography,aspracticedinthe20thCen-
tury,workingitsspellofcommunicationinavarietyofways.Perhapsthecre-
ativethrustbehindeachpicturecanonlybedescribedbythemysteriousterm
genius
—
butthefundamentalprinciplesexhibitedbythepicturesarebothex-
plainableanduniversallyavailable.