Friday 25 March 2011

All The Secrets To Art Photography



Art photography is a recently new form of art that has just started to become incredibly popular over the last couple of years as the advancements in digital photography has jumped a level or two. So what is art photography? Basically it's just a form of picture taking that is rendered in a certain way to reflect something 'arty' and that also has some kind of hidden meaning behind it that makes it more special than just a normal everyday photograph.


Many people refer art photography to pictorialism, which then intern means the method of constructing a picture keeping in mind that the picture take must be a form of art or can be turned into a art piece later using computer related technology. In fact this method of taking photos ceased to exist for quite sometime when important artists came to believe that more emphasis was being placed on design rather than on the picture.



With digital work, art photography is becoming more prevalent nowadays and, with the help of a computer, certain effects can be deliberately achieved so photographs can be made to look like an oil painting or as pastel, but this is governed mainly by the expertise of the photographer's own abilities.



Buying art photography at a gallery is relatively a simple task and with the advent of online art photography galleries, buyers can locate photographs that best suit their individual desires and tastes without the need of commuting or attending art exhibitions. Art photography is basically art that is creative, more so when it is visually aesthetic and is mostly appreciated for a having lots of imaginative and intellectual content. 



There are two types of cameras that a photographer chooses to use, manual and automatic. The photos are processed by hand and only experienced printers have the ability to make sure the photo is not damaged and comes out perfect in the end.



Many photographers choose to take black and white photos for their art photography as they believe that they can play on more emotions that have the ability to affect the human psyche in a more effective manner. However those photographers who tend to use more color in their photos believe the opposite is true that in fact color has the ability to create more emotions and inevitably stir more senses in the brain that black and white could ever achieve. If you are starting out in the world of art photography than it's best to implement both(perhaps in the same photos if possible)

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1 التعليقات:

Bruno said...

"Art photography is a recently new form of art that has just started to become incredibly popular over the last couple of years "

1-How can you write such a thing that sounds as if you have just discovered photography as a medium and an art form, totally ignoring the work of numerous dedicated photographers such as Alfred Stieglitz. His work for the recognition of photography as a fine art began at the end of the 19th century. Others had preceded him, and many, many others followed.
Why don't you start investigating the history of photography, of "fine art" photography in fact? We do not work in a vacuum; I do not, you do not, or should not. The first texts on photography as a fine art date back to the 19th century, some are over 150 years old. Many histories of photography exist; many document can be found on the web. Please do some work.

2-Please think twice before gratifying our mail-boxes with such approximate definition of fine art photography ["a form of picture taking that is rendered in a certain way to reflect something 'arty "] consisting in defining art photography by something vague thing that is supposed to be vaguely "arty"; in other word defining "art" by "something arty" {very enlightening, as if you defined the color "red" by "something that is reddish"; technically, this is called tautology (repeating the same thing without explaining anything).

3-As for "some kind of hidden meaning behind it", not very explanatory either, vague, and insufficient. Having "some kind of hidden meaning" does not make art; a text in Chinese has also for me "some kind of hidden meaning" for all I know it could be the instruction manual of a tin-opener!

4-Art does not depend on the tools that are used to produce it but on the human beings whose craft (acquired skills with the tools), sensitivity, vision, thoughts and emotions are expressed in a way that relates to esthetics (beauty, the picturesque, the sublime, but also their contrary as a way to express one's position towards the above-mentioned notions). It usually provides its audience with a pleasurable (sensual, emotional or intellectual) experience.

In other words fine art photography did not wait for the digital era, existed before it and will probably go on after it (fine-art image making at least).

Please let us be a little more thoughtful, educated (texts on fine art photography have been written since the 1850s, even if not everyone has read them; histories of the medium have existed since the beginning of the 20th century), and respectful of our audiences before bombarding them with superficial, unsubstantiated (if not worse) assertions.

For many of us, thank you!

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