Painterly? No, thanks!
Many viewers say “oh, such a painterly photograph” when they like a photo you show to them. They mean that in the sincerest way and to compliment the photographer on his or her achievement when they say “it looks like a painting.” This unnecessary, unsuitable accolade has been attached to photography since its beginning. When Talbot, Daguerre, Niépce created their first images, people saw them as “nature’s pencil” and photography as an extension of painting. Going back further provides a stronger link between creating an optical image and painting as painters used a device, camera obscura, to aid them in creating their art.
Although it might have been somewhat understandable in the early days and years of photography, this perception of seeing photography as an extension of painting, and a second class one at that, is no longer justified in my view, and viewers need to be disabused of this notion to fully appreciate photography. Let us not forget, photography also influenced painting in profound ways, a fact that does not make anyone to utter “oh, what a photographerly painting” when they see Degas’ horses or dancers. Yes, he was indeed influenced by photography like many other painters. After photographic examination established once and for all, for instance, that all four legs of a horse are off the ground at some point when they run, but never at a point where they are stretched all the way back and front like all the paintings depicted them until then. Degas painted his horses accurately and also some parts of their bodies outside his paintings just as a photograph may do due to framing. His dancers were depicted not only in performance, but often getting ready for it in not necessarily flattering ways. After all, if photography could capture life as it unfolded, why could painting not, and still be painting.
Another example is Marcelle Duchamp’s Nude Descending a Staircase, as if photographed under a stroboscope, a style unheard of until the invention of photography. One medium influencing another is nothing new but this does not make one an extension of the other.
Photography has unique qualities and should be viewed with these in mind. Painters never felt obliged to put a frame around the frameless world or to see the world from a single vantage point. They organized everything neatly within the borders of their canvas and sometimes even twisted the perspective of different elements in their paintings. Holbein’s Ambassadors is the prototypical example of multiple perspectives and a hidden image due to extreme distortion on one of these planes. These are not inherent characteristics of photography, camera points, establishes a vantage point and frames the photograph. Everything fits into this perspective and some parts of the world are cut or cut out. Photographs are “selected” after an analysis of the environment where paintings are synthesized to reflect the mental image in the mind of the painter. Examples abound.
Regrettably, this view of photography as an extension of painting is adopted, even aspired to by many photographers. They revel in the notion that their camera and photographic technique can produce something “approaching painting.” I believe the growth of one’s vision in any art form depends on understanding the qualities of the medium one uses. Now, I am not suggesting that photography cannot be impressionistic, expressionistic, realistic, romantic, pictorialist, etc. Any photographer may produce a body of photographic work that will fit those styles without being compared to painting. Studies of motion and its effects on photography can result in very interesting photographs. However, this techniques carried to the extreme in the line of creating something like a Rothko painting is merely “brush envy.” Don’t get me wrong, I am not trying to impose a particular view on anyone’s art. I am merely defending the art of photography as a self sufficient form not needing the crutches of brushes and stretched canvas.
Some may argue the point by using the example of super-realistic paintings that can easily be mistaken for a photograph. I would like to point out the name used for this style, “super-realistic painting” which defines it in the domain of the medium rather than calling it “photographerly painting” and extending it to the domain of photography.
Photography as an art form can stand on its own two feet, and very well. Look at the history of photography, see the works of Adams, Weston, Steiglitz, Evans, Sander, Bourke-White, Lange, Hine, Cartier-Bresson, Cunningham, Callahan, Siskind, Shore, Eggleston, DeCarava, Meyerowitz, and many more. Also, acquaint the mind with the writings and works of Szarkowski, Sontag, Robert Adams; enjoy the works of the above and other legendary photographers. Then, leave the crutches of canvas and brush, learn the medium, use it, and enjoy it. Capabilities of the medium are very broad and with the advent of digital photography they can be extended even more within the scope of photography and photographic art. Forget about brush envy.
And, please, don’t flatter me by saying how painterly my photographs are, or they look like paintings. They are photographs; I am a photographer, not a frustrated painter.
What is Kept Light About?
I have been writing on this site, and on its predecessor, for some years now. I have written on a variety of topics. Although all are somehow related to photography, the salience of issues becomes visible through a word analysis. To that end, I used a Web application from Wordle using the site’s content from a series of posts and instructing it to use about 4,000 words it found there. Wordle can automatically eliminate the common English words, which I used; and manually deleted some words that had no salience in the scope of things, such as “like” or “hill”. I could have eliminated more but it is tedious work, so you may still see some words that have no salience as to the content you may find here. The resulting word map is the image you see here, click on it to enlarge it. If you want to see the original, point your browser to Wordle.
Photographic Printing Workflow
I gave a presentation at the Photographic Society of Rhode Island, PSRI, on producing quality prints using repeatable workflow. It also included a couple of tips on how to create multiple proof prints at once. This is based on a technique I learned from John Paul Caponigro, he calls it “Bracket Proofing” and it works like a charm. The following slide show will give you a refresher if you were at the presentation, or will give you a general idea about the workflow that you can try to replicate. Watch the slide presentation as some effects and layered images are shown as single image in the PDF files. For instance, the soft proofing sample image shows only one state in the PDF file, you will see both states in the presentation. In any case, I hope you find them useful.
Photographic Printing Workflow Presentation
Photoshop is 20 today
The ubiquitous Photoshop started as someone’s doctoral work. With a little luck, confluence of events, and support from the industry leaders of the day, it has become a household name, even a verb. In the video below the two brothers, Thomas and John Knoll, reminisce about the starting days of “DeLuxe PhotoLab” with Russell Brown and Steve Guttman, two others in the original team that brought us the tool that is loved, hated, used, and abused today. Watch …
Cabbage
Some see photography as “finding beautiful things and capturing them”. I see it differently as “seeing things and creating beautiful photographs of them.” To wit, the lowly cabbage, especially with some bruises on it on a market stand will not appeal to many as it is not “beautiful.” A careful study of the subject, its shape and lines, texture, the light falling on it will likely prove the beauty seekers wrong. The road to creative and innovative photographic work requires departing from what you have been doing over and over again with reliable results, leaving your comfort zone. You need to go out on a limb, try something different, new, and create new work.
I photographed these in a small Aegean coast town in Turkey, Ayvalik, at its weekly market. The form and lines appeal to me greatly. I decided to present them in monochrome, toned B&W images to remove the impact of color, a layer of abstraction if you will. Tell me what you think of the subject and the photographs resulting from it.
… and his drawings
If you liked Michael Paul Smith’s time-travel photographs from the past, take a look at his drawings and paintings. They are rendered with great technical detail, great technique, and they manifest strong artistic vision. The drawing below is his “first attempt to draw with colored pencils.” Colored pencils? Explore all his collections and galleries for real gems.
A Different Kind of Photography
Flickr has millions of photographs; now I don’t know the exact number but it seems to house a huge volume of photographs. Many, obviously not all by any stretch of imaginations, are similar photographs of places people have visited, friends having good time, animals caught in interesting and cute poses, and so on. In that haystack, I have stumbled upon a photographer and his unique work that both amazed and very pleased me.
Michael Paul Smith combines his mastery of model building with his photography and the result is akin to some kind of time-travel. His affinity to mid 1950s automobiles and his roots still strong in his hometown compelled him to build models of the era, cars, trucks, diners, car dealerships, country roads, and so on. I find his model building skills are extraordinary and his photography quite original and exacting. I have his permission to use these couple of photographs to give you a taste of what awaits you. I encourage you to visit his flickr collection and have a trip down the memory lane. Thank you Michael for your vision, and for your permission to use the photographs in this post.
iPad for Photographers

Apple iPad
Apple introduced with the usual fanfare its new entry to the market: iPad. Many have started test-drooling over the pictures and Job’s cool presentation. Others, like me, see it as a stretched iPod Touch, which it is. I have read on various blogs “imagine taking your photography portfolio to a gallery on an iPad” and similar comments. Frankly, I think that will emphasize the technology of the presentation rather than the art in the photographs. After all, iPad will not be hanging on the wall, a beautiful print will.
One potential use of iPad highly interests me and I believe it will be the killer app for iPad. Add two features for photographers and it will start selling like hot cakes. First, add a CompactFlash and an SD card reader. This will make it irresistible to photographers. Imagine being able to store and back up your photos in the field and see them on a 10″ screen for field proofing. Second, put an application on iPad that allows it to directly tether to the DSLRs which will make it indispensable to the same crowd. Think about it, you are looking at a 10″ screen to preview your photograph while controlling the camera features from the same screen. You can do the same now but you need a laptop for that which is larger and bulkier. Until then, iPad will remain an oversize iPod Touch.
Are you listening Acer, HP, Dell, Asus, …?
Sharpening Workshop
I ran a workshop on January 3, 2010 for the members of PSRI. The main purpose was to explore the sharpening strategies and methods in Photoshop and Lightroom. In the 4-hour long workshop, the first part was some general background information on what sharpening is and why we need it, followed by an overview of the process. Then, using Photoshop and Lightroom, I presented the application of the ideas presented earlier. Following that, the participants practiced on their own images. Below is the slide show of the Powerpoint presentation I used. It does not cover the actual hands-on part, but should give a general idea about the sharpening.
A Very Brief Video Summary of 2001: A Space Odyssey
Last week I watched one of my all-time favorite movies again. 2001: A Space Odyssey by Stanley Kubrick is probably the best science fiction movie ever and does not seem to get stale or old. Instead, even in 2010, 9 years after the period it depicts, the movie still brings a glimpse of the future. Perhaps we will never get to 2001 as Kubrick and Clarke envisioned, maybe that’s the appeal.
The movie is layered and peeling those layers still proves to be fun, challenging, and inspirational. After I watched it, I decided to provide a visual summary that I hope will serve as a flashback tool for the fans of the movie. If you have not seen it before, this summary will likely not talk to you. But those who have seen the movie and enjoyed it will probably fill in the missing 2 hours from this visual summary. Let me know what you think of this derivative work and whether it speaks to you or not. About 12-minutes long.
Enjoy!









