Better Photos - Digital Photography History Section

 

Digital Photography History Navigation



Blue Ridge Community College Digital Photography
Digital Photography Lighting Information
Best Computer Monitor For Digital Photography
Royalty Free Digital Stock Photography
Sony Digital Photography
Digital Photography Site
Digital Photography Hacks
Digital Photography Fine Art
Lighting For Digital Photography
Digital History Photography
Seminars Digital Photography
Voted 1 Photography Digital Imaging Los Angeles
Digital Photography Supply
Digital Photography Courses In London
Best Digital Camera For Portrait Photography
Mastering Digital Slr Photography Mastering
Digital And Print Photography
Mastering Digital Slr Photography Mastering
Asa100 Digital Tradtional Photography
Photography How Digital Camers Work
Professional Photography Digital Imaging Information
Photography Digital Purchase Buy Landscape Art People
Digital Imaging Used In Photography
Tips For Taking Digital Photography
Digital Photography Information


Best Digital Photography History products



Main Digital Photography History sponsors

Digital Photography History

 

 

 

Welcome to Better Photos

 

Digital Photography History Article

This is a selection among article about Digital Photography History. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.

Insensitive Photos

As an editorial stock photographer you are not coached or art-directed by someone else, as is the case in commercial photography. You make the decisions. As an editorial stock photographer your mission is to produce images of the world, as you see it. This is the same license given to any artist. If you are constrained as an artist, then you are influenced, and if you are influenced, your directions are coming from someone other than you. If this be the case, then the photograph is not really your artistry.

Society would prefer that artists produce material that is 'politically correct,' or to put it another way, to not produce material that is considered insensitive to local, regional, or national mores.

Within our own industry, critics of your editorial stock photography will often wave the banner of "ethics," claiming that you have overstepped certain boundaries in photographing wildlife, or natural objects. Or that you’re intruding into the private lives of individuals or government officials.

What does “ethics” have to do with art? Or don’t you consider yourself an artist? If you think of yourself as an engineer, or a technician, maybe ethics plays a role.

What society calls unethical today, can change tomorrow. Not unlike the fashion industry, or our own industry.

For example, a couple of decades ago, photographers were wringing their hands over the possibility that digital photography would disrupt the 'ethical purity' of a photograph by allowing the manipulation of the contents to create an altered image from the original. Today, the voices of protest have subsided and society accepts a digitized image.

This seems to be a cultural question. I don’t think that before digitizing, or before film for that matter, artists ever thought of “ethics” in their art. Before film and digits, there were sketches, oils, pastels, watercolors, engravings, lithographs -- and no one ever asked the artist if he or she were being 'ethical' by manipulating a scene to change it or improve it.

Photography, in my opinion, was never meant to be a mechanical art where the medium was in control, not the photographer. Editorial stock photography allows you to go beyond the mere 'taking' of a picture. It allows you to make a picture - and that's being an artist. –RE

Rohn Engh, veteran stock photographer and best-selling author of “Sell & ReSell Your Photos” and “sellphotos.com,” has helped scores of photographers launch their careers. For access to great information on making money from pictures you like to take, and to receive this free report: “8 Steps to Becoming a Published Photographer,” visit http://www.sellphotos.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Rohn_Engh

Other Digital Photography History related resources


Digital Photography History News

No item elements found in rss feed.