snusmumriken
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My must some things be discarted with a lapidary
Are you using AI, Alex?

My must some things be discarted with a lapidary
Again with the judgement and the hierarchy... Why does one thing always have to be better or worse, or more or less, than the other? My must some things be discarted with a lapidary and dismissive verbal gesture? You can't have this gatekeeping and at the same time desire enrichig conversations.
I meant poor in the sense that a film can tell you a whole story, a book the same, a painting takes months to complete and is rich to look at, a photograph is instant and innately cannot tell you much is just a glimpse.
So, a photo is an abstraction from the reality on which you say it depends (since it "cannot tell you much" about that reality). That conflicts with what you said earlier but is a bit more reasonable. A photo can generate a number of "stories" - photos do that all the time.
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Different people will make up different stories about this photo. To some extent, a photo challenges the viewer's own imagination more than a movie or book does.
I'm interested to know what painting you're thinking of that's "rich to look at" and what that means.
Oh yes it can, and painted elements too. Check out Oscar Rejlander.A photo cannot include smaller photos
A photo cannot
A painting can have many many details upon it
In general, you'll find disagreement with however you end that statement. You are putting too great a restriction on what a photo can/cannot do/be.
And a photo can't?
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(Crewdson)
That's part of it, I think. Another part of it appears to be some very solid preconceptions (prejudice, dogma) about what different artforms are, how they're used, regarded and what they can 'do'. Those views are IMO so restricted that they continuously get you into trouble trying to define what you see or feel. Part of the reason I suggested earlier to go to a more analytical approach is to make those assumptions explicit and then account for them - either by putting them out there as a starting point (on a take-it-or-leave-it/agree-to-disagree basis), or, more productively, to see if perhaps you can develop your own views further. Putting it very simply, I think you're missing out on a lot by disregarding it from the get go. That's your loss, of course, so you can take that or leave it as you desire.
What do you hope to achieve with discussions like these?
Are you using AI, Alex?![]()
Always felt Meindert Hobbema's The Avenue (1689) could have been painted by Carter-Bresson...
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"Lapidaire" is commonly used in French. Guess not so much in English...![]()
Then I think it's needed to formulate your views in such a way that they can be understood by others. I believe part of that would be to avoid qualifications that end up being tautological, and perhaps also trying to refrain from absolutes that create friction and shift the focus away from where you want to go. It seems to me you're spending a lot of time defending your views while this doesn't appear to contribute to the goals you've stated.
I think part of why I feel a little bit sometimes passionate about it is because it has to do with my very own personal journey, for example I know that myself few years ago would probably not understand Cartier-Bresson at all and very likely be impressed by Cindy Shermann or David LaChapelle
Except that I would say that, contrary to what you think, you are not expressing points of view, but stating your opinions as facts, and as absolute
I'm with Koraks 100%. Except that I would say that, contrary to what you think, you are not expressing points of view, but stating your opinions as facts, and as absolute — "Kubrik is a very good master of the art but mediocre director that always resolves to his cheap tricks to impress (same as Hichcock)" being a good example. Not only do such ridiculous statements distract the conversation and make impossible any meaningful exchange of ideas, they make you lose all credibility, which is regrettable, since you seem to have curiosity about understanding photography and art.
As I mentioned, you do too much gatekeeping, i.e., too much standing in front of the gate, deciding who can come in and who's excluded from the club, all this according to criteria that belong to you alone but that you state as absolute. The problem with that is that you're not doing any kind of meaningful criticism, you're just validating. Other problem is you're not learning anything because you refuse to deal with those excluded, and refusing to deal with the fact that if they are exluded, it's only because you don't understand them.
I think he's expressing his viewpoint alright, but doing so in an unfortunate way that creates a diversion that seems to go in an entirely different direction than where he wants to go.
How can someone who likes Cartier-Bresson also like Helmut Newton?
How can someone that likes liver also like bananas?
He has a tendency to use harsh condemnation of one artist/art form to praise another. If he'd started out this thread just talking about joy and Lartigue, there would have been no problem.
How can someone that likes liver also like bananas?
Sorry maybe not like, let's say appreciate or consider great because I also like Bergman and Rocky but I have no illusions about which is entertainment and which art
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