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Pictorialism

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Revision as of 06:56, 9 October 2015 by Veera.sj (talk | contribs) (HOW EXPRESSION MAY BE GIVEN TO A PICTURE: HOW EXPRESSION MAY BE GIVEN TO A PICTURE)
"The Black Bowl", by George Seeley, circa 1907. Published in Camera Work, No 20 (1907)

Pictorialism is the name given to an international style and aesthetic movement that dominated photography during the later 19th and early 20th centuries. There is no standard definition of the term, but in general it refers to a style in which the photographer has somehow manipulated what would otherwise be a straightforward photograph as a means of "creating" an image rather than simply recording it. Typically, a pictorial photograph appears to lack a sharp focus (some more so than others), is printed in one or more colors other than black-and-white (ranging from warm brown to deep blue) and may have visible brush strokes or other manipulation of the surface. For the pictorialist, a photograph, like a painting, drawing or engraving, was a way of projecting an emotional intent into the viewer's realm of imagination.

Quotes

Practical Pictorial Photography (Alfred Horsley Hinton)

THE APPLICATION OF THE FOREGOING PRINCIPLES

  • …the strongest part of a picture is the sensation and the feeling which it creates, this being done through the agency of certain familiar objects more or less accurately depicted and represented with more or less completeness.
    The MOTIVE, then, in all pictorial work is to convey some thought or idea or sensation by means of a chosen subject.
  • …we might now formulate a maxim to the effect that art -- that is, in our case, pictorial representation --- employs the image of concrete things to create abstract ideas.

METHODS - THE PRACTICAL APPLICATION OF MEANS TO END

  • In selecting our subject…there are two factors which it should be borne in mind are essential, and these are Expression and Composition
  • …a person looking at the picture is unconsciously satisfied, and for the time is oblivious of the fact that the picture is only a little piece selected from all the wide panorama, and forgets that there was anything else in the world worth looking at.
  • …--- a view may include any number of interesting facts, may constitute a whole catalog of important and pretty items, and so be valuable as a view or as a record; but it would utterly fails as a pictorial composition.
  • It is an acknowledged canon that in artistic matters the art should not betray itself --- that is to say, in composition for instance, there should be no appearance of the thing having been planned. Let the intention to secure a symmetrical arrangement once be self-confessed, and it immediately seems artificial.
  • The composition may be ever so carefully worked out, but it must appear unconsciously done. And so it will be best in most cases to depart slightly from precise and symmetrical arrangement, as though unintentionally, lest the endeavor to obey artificial rules betrays itself.
  • It may also be noticed that in saying that Expression and Composition are the two essential components of a picture I have placed Expression first ; and I have done this because, whilst good Composition is by no means to be neglected, yet if the expression or sentiment of the picture be very finely done, then I think so long as we avoid bad composition I do not know that we need go further ; indeed, if the sentiment suggested by the picture be only powerful enough, we might almost ignore the rules of composition as generally taught, for if the expression be forcible enough it might absorb the beholder to the extent of making him unconscious of the composition.
  • But one may say, " I should rather photograph beautiful rippling water than streaks of mud and shining sand." Very likely, and if you want to photograph water, do so by all means ; but do not suppose that because, with a natural British instinct, we most of us experience a sense of pleasure at a broad expanse of water, that water is of itself and under all circumstances picturesque. What, after all, are the pleasant feelings which the mere sight of water call up ? Is it not a recollection of past experiences boating, swimming, or some such memory ? If you had never seen or heard of water before, what then ? Is it its brightness, smoothness, transparency, silent flowing, and the fresh, invigorating breeze, which makes you love the water ? If so, then remember that these attributes are actual physical facts, which may awaken feelings and memories, or associated ideas, but do not create new ones.
  • The desire to see for the sake of seeing is with most people the only desire to be gratified ; hence the delight in detail.
  • Hence SELECTION in photography, or at least in landscape and some other branches of work, often takes the place of what in painting becomes voluntary COMPOSITION.
  • In order to convey an expression of an abstract idea, founded mainly on the effect of light, shade, and atmosphere, we select our objects for this purpose; then the objects themselves and for themselves are of no importance, be they fairest flowers, stateliest trees, dingiest wharves, dainty cottages, or grimy barges no matter what their nature, if they form a pleasing design and serve as means to express the varying phases of light and shade, that is the only purpose for which we require them.
  • ...of course in some pictures the daintiness and beauty of the objects themselves may please us, I want to insist that such source of pleasure is of so little importance and so non-essential that we may have a supremely beautiful picture in which the objects composing it are not in themselves possessed of beauty or interest.
  • If we are to select our subjects or arrange our groups with a pictorial motive we must absolutely and entirely sacrifice every other consideration, and be prepared to cut out of our composition the prettiest and most interesting item, if by so doing composition pure and simple is improved. And if some subject you are attached to will not admit of composition or will not admit of your treating it pictorially, then photograph it if you wish, but never suppose that it will form a picture.

HOW EXPRESSION MAY BE GIVEN TO A PICTURE

  • The Expression in a picture depends chiefly on the relative degrees of light and shade of its various portions, and also upon the manner in which objects are represented, especially as regards the amount of detail introduced.
  • Nature, therefore, is not always suitable for the making of a picture, in which, as has been said, sentiment and emotion are essential, and hence our task is to seek for and choose those phases which do so appeal to our feelings.
  • The prettiest or most interesting prospect may lack the conditions which awaken our emotions, and, lacking the essentials of the picture, must be passed by.
  • The painter may make a sketch of a scene because the composition alone pleases him, and then he may subsequently introduce an effect of light and shade, an impression which he remembers having received in another place ; but the photographer must wait until nature itself offers both these favourable conditions simultaneously...
  • … to put it into slightly different form, it is not the facts in nature that the good picture aims at portraying, but the effects of light and shade accompanied by a pleasing arrangement.
  • Photography itself may err by inaccurately rendering the relative tones in Nature. Then we shall have to ask, What is " Tone "?...

HOW EXPRESSION MAY BE GIVEN TO A PICTURE

  • ...he (a photographer) forgets that unless he has learnt when the tones of a picture are right or not, he will not know whether his work is good or bad, nor know what to try and overcome in future.
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