Wow, interesting, I certainly opened up Pandora's Box!!!
Wow, interesting, I certainly opened up Pandora's Box!!!
Hear! Hear! Rick. Anyone who has used a darkroom has gone through an editing process just by picking which grade of paper will best print their negative. Frank Hurley used to cut and sandwich up to 4 negatives to get his results - and they are now 'historical documents'.
Portrait photographers create what will sell to their client. Market imperatives determine the result.
We non pros have the freedom to do just what we want when we shoot - don't knock the pros for wanting to make a living.
Odille
“Can't keep my eyes from the circling sky”
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I got 9 from 12 correct, guess I've got an eye for that type of thing. Anyway on the topic, I have no problem with image manipulation in the right context. For example taking someone out of a picture is generally fine if it is say advertising, but not acceptable to me if in photo-journalism.
And good PP, shouldn't shouldn't be noticable, it should look natural.
Yes and I think these concepts probably go together at times, too. I'm more journalistic than artistic in my tastes, and I have no problem with minor post-processing of the image to clarify the natural message in photo-journalism. OTOH, change the context and it's no longer photo-journalism, is it? It's commentary, or portraiture or something else other than photo-journalism.
When it comes to artistic licence there are limits too, IMHO. There can be great beauty in the natural image, however flawed, and manipulating that to produce what is perceived as aesthetically attractive in the popular idiom can be, I believe, every bit as dishonest as manipulating the context of a journalistic image. Of course that's just my personal opinion and the older I get the less that seems to count! Just ask my children!
Waz
Be who you are and say what you mean, because those who matter don't mind don't matter and those who mind don't matter - Dr. Seuss...
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Little boxes, little boxes, so neatly stacked each way. I feel very few here have ever seen the art studio of a popular magazine or newspaper or even the processing/art lab of a throw-away publisher. Sure, the masters are wonderful artists but most have been commercial failures and that's fine and probably true of every painter, musician or photographer that has followed that path. But in reality these artists are not commercial or professional photographers. En-mass they account for so little of photographic work done world wide by so many great people.
Professional photography is about acquiring photos for money or reward and with all the major publishers worldwide there is a distinct line between the photographer and the processor. Sure, it helps to know your craft and how to process but in most commercial cases that will be completely out of your hands.
In simple terms a good professional photographer needs to know the fundamentals of a usable frame, get the exposure right and make sure composition is spot on. Any decent magazine, newspaper or publisher will handle the rest and as far as the majors are concerned will insist on the pristine RAW image or format of their choice, untouched.
So you need to get your terminology right, a photographic artist is or can be a master but more than likely will never be a professional.
Photojournalist | Filmmaker | Writer | National Geographic | Royal Geographic
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Point taken. Does that then imply that professional photographers - and you are uniquely positioned to reply - accept that they have absolutely no say in how their images are used or abused? Or is there a line in terms of manipulation of your "product" which might cause you to no longer make it available to any given commercial entity after the event?
For an extreme example: You take a terrific image of person of interest A at one event, and a killer image of person of interest B at another different event, and the post-processing genius decides to put them together at the same event implying some connection that simply didn't exist. That is seriously dishonest in any idiom. Would you refuse to supply images to that organisation thereafter? IOW, as a professional do you give up any form of control or responsibility when you sell the original image?
I am not being critical here; only intensely curious. Please don't take offence at the question. I have in mind the still current debate about retouching of images by the glossy magazines portraying an unrealistic image of what is attractive in women that most ladies cannot hope to emulate in real life.
Excellent questions. Many don't understand the role of a professional photographer particularly with commissioned work, corporate and industrial shoots and most magazine/publication photography. This type of work forms the greater part of a professionals life and is quite different to say wedding photography which is such a tiny part of the market.
The corporate industrial work is generally contractual and almost exclusively driven by the client, product shots in magazines and even high end photography for publications like National Geographic are driven specifically by the needs of that magazine.
The client owns the shoot and can in most cases do whatever they please with any photograph you may submit. In the case of most high end publications you submit a portfolio that may include two or three hundred frames. They could use two or three or any combination and that's their choice and you are paid accordingly, sometimes very handsomely. Generally, the higher your fee the less say you have in the end product. The client contracts your specific professional or creative skills.
General photography, like a car race, sporting match or function where the potential client is dependent on your skills pays considerably less because of the intangibles on both sides.
Most of my work is post-produced by the client but I do have to shoot to a specification so the fundamentals are important. In essence it's a business focus not necessarily an art form. Hence my remarks differentiating the master from the professional. To make money you have to produce what the client needs which may not necessarily be the outcome you would like personally.
Is it fair to say then that professional photographers would necessarily spend more time in touch with their inner technician than their inner artist? I'm sure the reality lies in some sort of balance between the two, but I guess that you're saying the scales are heavily weighted to the technical side for commercial work? If so, how frustrating do you find that? Do you ever walk away muttering to yourself "... that Philistine wouldn't recognise a great shot if it bit him (or her) on the nose?"
Maybe your answer to those questions would put someone's ambitions to turn this hobby into a profession in a more realistic light. Just a thought. Thank you for your patient responses thus far.
You know WhoDo I've had nearly thirty years of professional experience and of course you get frustrated. The key I feel is to look for a variety of work (sometimes a necessity) to ease that frustration. National Geo is so different to product shoots and both are different to corporate work. Last week I was photographing the new livery on Queensland trains. A month ago I was in the Philippines, last year in Africa, Monday is a product shoot.
Over the years I've become a business person with photography one of my skill sets. In the pure art form there are many folk more creative than I, particularly on this forum, but I make really good money from my profession and I thoroughly enjoy it. In fact I love photography so much it's also my hobby. And in fact it's only my second occupation with television production, documentary making my primary living.
Anyone looking at photography as a living needs to develop creative and technical skills but without a firm base in business and a real love for the life style will find it very hard in deed to succeed for long. You've gotta love it.
I'm hearin' ya, Redgum. For me the lifestyle would be the killer. I work for a global laboratory company and one of the "perks" is a fair amount of travel. I've come to dislike aeroplanes, airports and hotels intensely! It just isn't the lifestyle for me, so following the call of a professional career in photography definitely wouldn't be on my bucket list!
I do understand your passion for the craft, though. I am a professional educator who has come to be a business person with education among my skill sets. There isn't anything I enjoy more than getting back into a training session with a bunch of eager learners. The necessary evils of budgets, targets, EBIT, etc., all fade into obscurity when an eager mind challenges me for answers! As you said, you gotta love it!
Thanks again for taking the time.