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Fine Art Photography. Reaction against photography's use by painters (i.e. Courbet) to help them paint Reaction against the documentary tradition of late 18 th and 19 th C – move away from a Humanist or people/societal centred approach
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Reaction against photography's use by painters (i.e. Courbet) to help them paint • Reaction against the documentary tradition of late 18th and 19th C – move away from a Humanist or people/societal centred approach • Linking the aesthetic ethos of art (fascination with form, tone, light, colour) • “Photography is not art, but can be made into art” - De Zayas 1913 Fine art takes in all other genres
Photos began to develop own codes as art; no manipulation of reality-straight-pure-form-no reference to the subject as such • Composition is more important than context • Alfred Stieglitz; driving force behind fine art photography
Photographer does not record, but creates • Landscapes, as popular theme link to higher ideals • Stieglitz’s Equivalents series seek ideal form and were displayed in wide white mounts to emphasise purity of their vision
Stieglitz was committed to the gallery as an ideal Gallery’s contextualised art photographer against the wider history of art An art print gains value from being hung in an opposite way to a documentary imaged that is mass produced Art photography is often envisaged as such
“The fullest realisation of the potential of the subject through the use of straight photographic methods” - Paul Strand
Edward Weston: Emphasis on form • Body transcends into natural shapes • No longer a human or cultural product but part of the wider metaphysical (almost spiritual) world of shape and form that artists aspired to
The nude continues to be a seminal subject for fine art photographers Ruth Bernhard Sylvie Blum
Ansel Adams keeps fine arts concern with purity and form and makes the ordinary into something unique
His landscapes follow formal conventions of painting whilst giving unique photographic intensity
John Paul Edwards & William Van Dyke were contemporaries of Adams and Weston and together were some of the members of f.64; a group dedicated to intense scrutiny of the world through the lens and in a way that moved against earlier pictorial or painterly styles
Once photographed, the object transcends everyday to become art • Imogen Cunningham
Other art photographers do focus on culture • Paul Strand: works within active world of human meaning – a documenters approach? • Movement (implied sometimes) and subject fit into larger structure of society
Minor White: Expressionist; A movement in the arts during the early part of the 20th century that emphasized subjective expression of the artist's inner experiences
Aaron Siskind: Abstract expressionism • Taking reference from painterly forms yet still focus on transforming the ordinary
Ernst Haas Nature and Machine 1975 • Colour begins to get used in art photography • B&W seen by purists as truer to intention of capturing form
ed • Gregory Crewdson from Beneath The Roses • Contemporary fine art can include the dramatic and staged and create a sense of narrative that does refer to society
Jeff Wall A Sudden Gust Of Wind • Wall often recreates paintings, as such his style is very formal still
Philip Lorca DiCorcia'shustler series • alternates between informal snapshots and iconic quality staged compositions
MasahisaFukase'sRavens • Example of how contemporary art photography can be a personal reference point
Summary • Fine art photography began as reaction against how photography was used in the art world and as a reaction against the documentary ethos of social engagement • Focus on form (shape, pattern, line, texture) • B&W holds elitist status (still?) • Context of viewing is important • Fine art can include other genres, even docu! • Contemporary images often attempt to engage the viewer more