Is It Photography?

Are images like the butterfly above or below, or this clematis, photography?

Good question. In one sense, they certainly start out as digital captures, so are at least technically digital photographs in origin. And I’m not Photoshop artsy-filter-slap-happy, at least I hope not. Let it be clearly understood that nothing other than the Sharpen > Unsharp Mask Filter was used from the Photoshop Filter menu.

In another sense, a viewer could quite reasonably look at the imagery and would be right in assuming that non-photographic techniques are involved. The clematis in particular looks more like painting than photography to me.

Here’s where I come out. A good question, but ultimately it may not matter much what an image is, provided the image works visually. But if I had to say, I’d say these images are a new media, part photography part something new, and part of the evolution of digital photography into a new art form. (Drum roll, please!)

Butterfly

View this image larger.

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7 Responses to “Is It Photography?”

  1. TechNovelty » Ist ein digitales Foto noch Fotografie? Says:

    [...] gramme von Harold Davis’ Photoblog 2.0 dienen. Er selbst stellt die Frage im Beitrag Is It Photography?. Tatsache ist aber, es ist durchaus möglich derartige Bilder auf analogem Weg zu er [...]

  2. Photoblog 2.0: » Photoblog 2.0 Archive: » Xrays, Photograms, and Cross Processing, Oh My! Says:

    [...] links: Photograms topic on my blog, Photogram portfolio page, my photogram set on Flickr, Is It Photography?, Cross Processing, Photograms for the Digital Era, Rayographs. [...]

  3. Photoblog 2.0: » Photoblog 2.0 Archive: » From Filter Play to Layer Masking Says:

    [...] lter play, like this stylized version of a photo of a marble, with stops along the way for Warhol-like renditions of a butterfly, to more surreal and apparently photographic images like World wi [...]

  4. Photoblog 2.0: » Photoblog 2.0 Archive: » Coleoptera Says:

    [...] m the Cameroons, Stephanorrhina gaffata. I post-processed it in somewhat the same style as my Butterfly 2.

    This entry was posted

    on Sunday, December [...]

  5. Photoblog 2.0: » Photoblog 2.0 Archive: » Dragonfly Says:

    [...] darkroom using masking, channel operations, and cross processing to create an effect that owes as much to painting as it does to photography.

    This entry was posted [...]

  6. Photoblog 2.0: » Photoblog 2.0 Archive: » Coleoptera after Warhol Says:

    [...] Perhaps it’s just as well that Warhol came before Photoshop… Related images: Butterfly 2, Stained Glass Bug, Coleoptera.

    This entry was posted
    [...]

  7. Photoblog 2.0: » Photoblog 2.0 Archive: » Ringing Cedars Covers Says:

    [...] I blogged the image used on this cover here. [...]

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