jrista said:Kahuna said:I used to say that technology is killing XX .... in this case photography. I am wrong about that, technology is taking photography in another direction, IMHO the wrong direction. When technology levels the playing field for all afforadably, when all I have to do is turn that dial to the green P, not worry about the photo because post processing will take care of any issues, photography is dead. Composition, lighting, position, weather are just reduced to chance moments that anyone carrying an IPhone has an equal probability of capturing that moment....Probably a higher probability ...
The younger generation are not looking for technology advances in a DLSR camera, what they do expect is that the technology advances are crammed into their IPhone 6.
A camera is slowly becoming nothing more than a vehicle to take a selfie and quickly post it online for every to "LIKE".
There is photography and there is art. Someone taking selfies isn't producing art...it's just a "picture", a memory, something they share with their friends. The stuff Ross Harvy produces? That's art. It may be his job, but it's also his art.
There is a difference between photographic art and pictures people share with their friends. That's why I've said on multiple occasions I really don't care about the Rebels or point and shoot cameras. The market I care about is the higher end market. The xxDs and the DXXXs, the 5Ds and 7Ds and D4s and D800s and A7rs and all of that? Those are the tools artists use to create art.
You act like better technology is the end of photography, just because everyone can snap a selfie. Seriously? Do you think all the artists out there who's art is photography are suddenly going to be incapable of creating art because a few million more people are able to take selfies now? Is the quality of their art doing to diminish because a billion smartphones have cameras now? I mean, honestly?
There are snapshots, and there is art. Just like there were polaroids on fridges and 4x5 or 8x10 contact prints in galleries during the film age. For artists, better technology removes limitations and allows for better art. It blows my mind that people are against technological improvement because they don't want more people to be able to take photographs. Or, and this is far more important...discover that they may have potential as a photographer, a real photographer, and become a world-renown artist. Technology improves accessibility...that's a GOOD thing!! I find it incredibly selfish and egotistical that some people would halt technological progress to stunt the ability of more "non-photographers" to take good photographs. Wow.
I'm out guys. These discussions are just...low. I have no interest anymore.
So I took neutral ground on your position with sensors/cameras. I did make comment on the pitfalls of technology. Yes I was so bold as to say that photography as "art" is in jeopardy. The interest of our younger generation in using photography as a vehicle for art is eroding quickly and being replaced with junk (I use selfies as the example). Your opinion differs, thats fine. No personal attack there yet you call me a fool. Thank you. Thank you for exposing your true colors.
You cannot deny that technology kills... unless you are the fool.
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