Originally Posted by
xpatUSA
A little too all-encompassing, IMHO.
It says that only pictures produced on paper can be termed as being "artistic". Neither can it be true that ALL electronic displays are unable to do justice to "artwork".
NO DOUBT! I have to admit that finding the right choice of words to try and simplify something that is pretty complicated is problematic. I have spent a lot of time both learning and practicing the development of digital images. Whether or not that is artistic is fair to argue with. However, I will go out on a limb and suggest that just understanding color profiles is every bit as complicated as what is being discussed herein. The display I use for developing photos is calibrated. Like my cameras, my display is NOT the best but it does qualify as pretty good. I have no doubt that none of the other displays I have, on all manner of devices which are but a tiny example of those available to the society, fail to do justice when it comes to faithfully producing the same appearance as what the development process intended. The difference in color profiles required for different printers and paper also complicates the process further. In that, getting a faithful print is complicated. Even with all of that at the end of the day the printed version is going to differ, to some extent, from what was seen on the display. My preference for paper is that it removes all of these variances from what different people get to see when viewing the same printed version. But of course paper also differs. By using the same kind of good quality paper on a fairly good printer I do end up with pictures that look the same to me. Therefore, my preference for paper being the ultimate measure of getting a correct result.
With that said, it would be quite reasonable to suggest that what counts as art is in the eye of the beholder and simply being different doesn’t make something bad/worse. Then of course there are differences in human vision which are NOT accounted for in any way. In fact, I even find myself polling different viewers in some cases to see which versions of the same picture they like best. There is seldom uniform agreement.
In the context in which I used the term herein, I’d say that what I had in mind was to compare the developing process that I go through with what my parents did when producing paintings. What I end up with is my attempt to match their artistic abilities.