Weston was as well.Ansel Adams was a pictorialist early in his career.
The second sentence seems like a nonsequitur. Why does the advent of postings on the internet require that serious photography be emotionless and have flat lighting?With the advent of cheap pocket cameras and later smart phones with images posted on the internet, photographic images became ubiquitous. The camera doesn't matter, but rather it is all about creating images that are emotionless and candid observations of the world, generally with very muted, flat lighting.
I think our community has a wide variety of approaches to photography, which is a real strength. That helps push us to think outside our usual box, and this thread has gotten me thinking. My approach is very different from yours. While I do get a great deal of satisfaction from getting prints into an exhibit, a gallery, or (only once) a museum, I am only interested in making images that give me satisfaction, and when the fashions are not consistent with that, I'll just forgo the chance.
An example I've used before is Douglas Stinson's Urinals, which he used in a 2019 article in the PSA Journal as an example of the sort of work that fine art photographers do in the current fashion but club photographers don't do. It's an out of focus black and white shot of a row of urinals, which he described as "playing with repetition, light and shadow." He was criticizing club photographers for not producing images like that. If that's the accusation, I plead guilty. If I somehow accidentally produced something like that, I would delete it in my first culling in Lightroom. It's boring and ugly, IMHO. I don't care that it's in fashion. It would give me no satisfaction to produce something like that, regardless of how it's received.
I went through this last year when I was pitching my prints to galleries. One person--a photographer himself and a framer--like what I showed him but said that it wouldn't fit in his store, which focused more on reproductions than signed originals. He recommended two nearby galleries. The owner of one of them never responded to me. The other one I didn't even approach. I looked at some of what she stocks, and it's mostly in the "fine art" realm. I figured that the chances were near zero that she would be interested in highly realistic work like mine. I didn't try to produce what she would more likely want. I just went elsewhere.
Don't get me wrong: I'm not likening the images in this thread to his. My point is that I wouldn't make images of people with expressions of that sort this woman shows unless I found the results personally satisfying. That will take me out of the running for some exhibitions, etc.