Is Digital Photography Too Perfect? Add A Touch Of The Savage

Powerful photography does not have to be technically perfect

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Is Digital Photography Too Perfect? Add A Touch Of The Savage


NOTE: I wrote this essay almost 10 years ago in 2002 when I published it on my website.

This artist "has fire -- rather like a van Gogh painting -- a touch of the savage -- good for art." Quote from the film Humoresque (1946) with Joan Crawford and John Garfield.

Computers allow us to create perfect copy. Type is justified, everything lines up, photographs are precise. While this exactness may be good for making brochures, it is not necessary or even desirable when it comes to making art.

Computers and digital technology can be very dangerous and seductive because they allow endless manipulation, an endless quest for perfection. If an artist does not have a clear idea of what he or she is after, the image will probably fail.


"...the artist must be forgiven if he [she] regards the present state of outward appearances in his [her] own particular world as accidentally fixed in time and space. And as altogether inadequate compared with his [her] penetrating vision and depth of feeling." Paul Klee (On Modern Art, 1924)


In the 1950's the New York abstract expressionists created a uniquely American art that had a somewhat unfinished look. It was raw and crude. The excitement of Jackson Pollock's paintings or the graphic images of Franz Kline came in part from their rough and ready appearance. When you see a Pollock painting, you want to touch the paint; it feels a little messy -- it is so real, so tactile, so sensual.

Good or great art is more than technology or technique, although these can be important contributing factors. To create truly meaningful art, the artist needs to have a vision of what he or she is trying to say or a sense of the effect that the art should have on viewers.

My particular vision is to create a digital photographic art which is a playful and spontaneous -- a bit rude, a bit crude and in your face. I want it to feel like real life, like cinema verite. I want the viewer to know that I took a picture of a real scene at a specific time under a particular light and with my feelings of the moment.

Although my digital photographs are of the real world, I like to push the digital process to its extreme limits with various techniques such as low light exposure and camera movement.

As I have written before, digital photography has the potential to be a personal expressionist art form, that allows individuals the means to say things visually that have been impossible before. Because it is relatively cheap and can be displayed to a world wide audience on the Internet, it is has the potential to involve and reach thousands if not millions.


"Everyday life is only an illusion behind which lies the reality of dreams...It is not only MY dreams. My belief is that all these dreams are yours as well. And the only distinction between me and you is that I can articulate them. And that is what poetry or painting or literature or film making is all about. It's as simple as that." Quote from Werner Herzog about Director Herzog filming his movie Fitzcarraldo (from the documentary movie Burden of Dreams (1982), Director Les Blank)


The French thinker Julia Kristeva has said that today there is a threat to our psychic space and that people do not have a means of expressing what is happening to them. She said that there are "new maladies of the soul." Modern humans have a problem "expressing problems in words and images."

With the right attitude, digital photography has the power to express our deepest and most personal dreams. And I believe that it has the ability to create art work which is as moving and beautiful as the cave drawings at Lascaux or the paintings of van Gogh.

NOTE:See a list of my other articles here at PIXIQ. www.pixiq.com/contributors/rick-doble

For more about my approach to photography see my book: Experimental Digital Photography.
Book Cover:

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Comments

Anonymous
Anonymous

Very well put and excellent clarification about the different purposes of photography (or any means of expression really). The Herzog quote was perfect.

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