It has been difficult to find out what constitutes a proper lens for photographing 2D artwork, say a painting about 16" x 20". One of the factors I would want is a lens that offers a sharp focus over the entire painting.
Of the opinions I have read so far, on various websites, a couple of statements stand out beyond the obvious requirements of good lighting and having the painting perpendicular to the axis of the lens. In particular:
(1) The artwork should fill the field of view.
(2) Primary macro lenses are best because they have sharpness and a "flat field".
A written definition of a "flat field" has so far escaped my search, but it probably means that the locus of the points that are in sharp focus form a plane perpendicular to the axis of the lens. (I would like to call such a lens a "planar" lens, but that seems to be a trademark name used by Zeiss instead of a technical term.) A natural guess for me would be that the locus of sharpest focus across the field of view would be a curved surface, perhaps the surface of a sphere about some point in the lens. That would be bad news for photographing a painting if the lens had a very small depth of field.
My impression is that depth of field numbers apply to points in focus near the axis of the lens. Surely it is important to know the 2D locus of (sharpest) focus as well as the 3D region of focus across the entire field of view. I would very much appreciate a reference to a good publication that deals with this.
Stasch