The debate about whether photography is art is one that has been raging in the art world for a long time and we are not likely to totally solve it here. But it can be an important decision you have to make if you are considering a career in photography with the goal of producing quality art works. If that is where you are, the idea that someone would say “That’s not art, you just took a picture” is pretty disturbing. So it’s worth looking at the question from different view points before we pick which side to weigh in on.

 

Of course, art is a subjective thing. Many individuals would look at Ansel Adams as artwork and determine most definitely that modern art is not art because it “doesn’t look like anything.” If you have advanced into todays art photography world, you will definitely see something at some time along the way occupying space in a perfectly respectable art museum that, to you, could never be considered art.

 

So is art just a matter of opinion? To some extent, yes. But there is an art world and an industry behind it that depend on there being some standards upon which art is judged. One such standard is the intent of the artist. If you express art through a photograph derived from a photograph that is intended to be viewed as art, then the viewer is obligated to try to see the artistic merit in it. It’s debatable if the artist see valuable chacteristics may depend on the viewer’s abilities, how good you are at getting your artistic message across or many other factors.

 

But just wanting something to be art doesn’t make it art, does it? As a layman in the art world, I sometimes go with the “I don’t know art but I know what I like” system of evaluating pieces I see. Art, after all, has a tendency to touch us in another place that is above and beyond the image. It is an emotional place, a place of reflection and understanding. Maybe we would say it touches our “soul”. For a work to be art, there should be a message, a feeling, a reason the artist made the work because he or she wanted to say something, even how I see into the meaning of a comment than what the artist meant.

 

So that might also be an evaluation of a photograph as to its artistic merit or not. Now the primary objection to whether photography is art sometimes is that a photograph is often a realistic depiction of a moment taken with a machine and some would say that “anybody can take a picture.” The implication is that the same mechanical skill it might take to paint a picture of sculpt a statue is not needed for photographic art.

 

It’s true that the mechanical skill that the guy at Wal-Mart might need to take baby pictures may be the same as a great photographic artist might need. But the objection doesn’t hold up because the same human language is used to create great poetry as it takes yell out obscenities at a baseball game. It’s not the skilled talent of an individual that makes it automatically an art piece.

 

Good comments and kudos from artistic judges to photographic exhibitions in the fine museums in the world. The very fact that photography is considered art by those who know may be evidence enough. So the conclusion must be that because the arguments against the artistic value of photographs are weak and people who know consider photography to be art, then we are safe in viewing what we do artistically too. And that opens up that side of your soul to express yourself through the medium you love the most – photography.

 

Author: Richard’s Photography Portraits in San Antonio, Texas

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