Recently I had a discussion about a comment in a photographic club magazine about the nature of photography. The editor of the publication said that "if you are serious about photography then you have to print". He did so for what he considered valid reasons:
- Photographs were meant for paper, not screens
- The print is able to be seen by any viewer in a consistent form, whereas screens may vary considerably the in quality of their output.
- A good print is probably better in terms of definition and tonal quality than a screen.
- Printed pictures can be admired at length while digital are shown for only a few seconds in a show
The editor apparently meant these comments in the context that he felt not enough people were entering print competitions because more people are outputting to displays, which could not be accommodated in the conventional framed show format. However, the phrasing suggested that this was applied to all photography.
So here is where I get to the issue...
1: "photographs were meant to be printed on paper"...
I had to take issue with that as I have never seen a valid definition of photography specifying the actual output, so I question the validity of that statement. Let me emphasize that I consider the printed image to be a valid and important expression, so I am not trying to undermine the printing of images, but I don't see it as exclusively valid either.
For a long time the image on paper has been the main means by which the mass of photographers have expressed themselves because it was the most effective, affordable and efficient means to do so at the time; however times have changed. In the latter part of the last century slide transparencies and more efficient slide projectors have allowed more individuals to share their work with larger groups, along with quality prints in galleries.
The transparency arguably represents the purest form of photography as the final product is the actually exposed medium, without post-production. The only way to express creativity once the image was taken was through the chemical darkroom and that resulted in general in prints - although I have seen output on etchings and other media apart from paper.
If one wanted one’s work to be shown en masse it required either a significant private investment or acceptance by a publishing house with editorial oversight.
Three revolutionary technologies changed everything.
Firstly, the development of digital imaging meant that people could take photos and see the results immediately and freely. While the technology was initially primitive and expensive, it has taken over as the main medium for photographic endeavour. (Yes, there are still people who love film and bless them I am not discounting them, but digital is much more prevalent). Just as the Box Brownie, the Instamatic and the Land Camera brought simpler and more engaging recording technologies, so the digital camera brought many powerful tools that enabled skilled and unskilled users to capture and share amazing quality images.
Secondly the parallel development of cheap personal computing provided a cost-effective platform for software that has created the digital darkroom. Now, as we use a digital camera and sit at a keyboard, we can be more powerful than ever in the creation and manipulation of our images, if we have the skills to do so. Those images can be output on many media from prints on paper, canvas and acrylics to monitors, to images carved by robots or etched in many materials.
The third revolutionary development was that of the World Wide Web, which has had a profound impact upon society as never before. The closest previous change was the invention of the printing press, giving masses the ability to develop literacy and to learn from books in a way that was hitherto limited to a select and powerful élite of society. That limitation of information held back the vast intellectual potential of humanity but, once established, the printing press unleashed a wave of creativity and technological, artistic and social development we still ride today.
The Web did something extremely profound and disruptive. It allowed us to publish freely. Until the Web and the Internet on which it runs became available, anyone seeking to publish needed the support of a class of publishers and editors who defined what was, and was not worthy of mass dissemination, and they printed it on paper, or possibly on a TV screen. With a free Web came the ability to create digitally and share it without oversight or restriction. This has generated a tsunami of creativity that has reflected a freedom of expression never before experienced. Without doubt this is a double-edged sword: on one hand the Web has been used for many positive and enhancing purposes: otherwise disenfranchised people have made life-changing creations. It is also true to say that without oversight the Web has allowed the publishing of material of dubious quality. Like any tool it has been used for good and evil.
Why am I saying all this? The web has produced an environment that, along with digital media, has democratised and exploded the use of photography. Many people engage in photography for a purpose rather than pure art, yet they still want to be good photographers within their own context. They use the medium to record other artistic endeavours, and to support social, literary, commercial, political and scientific activities, and they do so with serious intent. For example I think that those professional photojournalists who do not have their images printed on paper would take umbrage at being told they were not serious photographers.
It seems to me there are at least two (NOT mutually exclusive) camps in the photographic world. Competitions, as I perceive them, represent “pure photography", i.e. the creation of art for art’s sake, whereas “applied photography” captures an image for a further purpose.
Like any purely artistic endeavour, to say that one image is better than another is prone to debate once one gets past the technical elements of the construct itself. Thus I personally see the judging process in “pure photography” as having a very subjective element with regards artistic content: some of the images lauded by judges I would have thrown out if they were mine, and some that scored low I thought were excellent! In my 35 years of photography I had avoided joining any photographic club until recently because I felt a huge pressure to compete with others, and that is not my style. I prefer to compete with myself.
Previous to this I think photographic societies were dominated by a photographic élite who sought to enhance their abilities for the art itself. While I completely support that agenda for those purists, I think we also have to recognize that the demography has changed. People may be serious about photography, but not as a pure art in itself. So we have to ask ourselves, in the context of a camera club, how does that impact on how the members express themselves photographically, and what does that say to them as regards what is acceptable photography?
2. Paper is consistent, but screens vary their output.
I have some sympathy with that idea as long as everyone is looking at the same print or one printed on identical paper and with the same printer settings. Still, again one could argue that any properly configured screen with the same resolution should be consistent in showing what was originally intended. That leads us to making sure that we have properly configured our screens, which one would have to do in any case if we were to manipulate the image on screen and expect the same print consistency…
3. A good print is probably better in tone and definition than a screen.
For the moment I would agree, if we consider the pure form of the art. Still, times are a-changing, and with the development of higher definition screens now and in the future that will be less and less of an issue. See also 4.
4. Printed images can be admired at length while screens only display for a short time.
That really depends on what resources one uses to display them. I have seen the National Geographic International Wildlife Photography road show and the images were all on screens. Each had its own screen and they looked amazing. In fact I bought the books as souvenirs but find the printed images dull in comparison. Furthermore individuals who are not engaged in competition may well choose, as I have done, to put their photos on screens that can change images for free.
So, having opened either a can of worms or a Pandora ’s Box, I shall welcome the debate. Let battle commence!