Carlo Evidente wrote this on his Facebook page:
"Photographs are kind of imitation. a great painter captures a true likeness. the camera helps an amateur come close."
It got me thinking (and I only became aware of that fact that the quote was actually lifted from a video game, Alice: Madness Returns), so I dashed to make a response. Here's what I said:
Not
necessarily. Depends on vision. If you mean the painter "creates"
something directly from his vision, what does it make of painters who
use photos to draft their scenes? Are they cheating?
Many
painters start their paintings with something from reality. Even
Michaelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci were known to have used the camera obscura to "trace" their subjects. Yet, they've never been accused of being "lesser painters."
Anyway,
I think that it also has something to do with interpretation. An
intelligent person always interprets a scene, not just project it.
Hence, a painter (i.e., an artistically intelligent person) sees a scene
and paints it THE WAY HE SEES IT. It could be how you and I also see
the scene (i.e., our visions coincide), or very different from how we
see it. Either way, we judge the painting not by how faithful it is to
the actual scene but from how good the rendition is. In art,
interpretation is more important than the truth. An artist's "vision" is
his/her version of the truth, and the artwork is the performance (i.e.,
his/her interpretation) of that "truth".
We
deride photographs (as art) not because they are intrinsically ugly
(i.e., the truth within a particular photograph is ugly) but because it
seems rather "easy" to perform/interpret the truth/"vision of truth" in
the final output.
A blog site dedicated to nothing, it can be about anything. Maintained by Emmanuel Lerona - a lit teacher, a struggling writer, a passionate photography hobbyist, a decisive-moment chaser, and lover of Filipino dishes. He is a faculty member of the Humanities Division of UP Visayas. He also tries to put his hands on other things, like painting, drawing, acting, cooking (of course!) and other stuff. He takes pictures of delicious food, cracked walls, friends, and "interesting strangers."
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Respecting Art, Respecting Photography
Friday, January 18, 2013
"Save the Birds, Save the Trees" PSA
This is a project I did for my Development Communication 207 class at the UP Open University.
Credits:
Writer/Producer/Director: Emmanuel Lerona
Voice Over: Joenell Blancaver
Poster: Emmanuel A. Lerona
Music: Sergei Bachmanininoff's "Vocalise" performed by David Garrett
DISCLAIMER: This is a mock campaign. The Wild Bird Club of the Philippines doesn't have an actual campaign similar to this but I aligned my project with the goals, mission, and vision of the club (since I also am a member of the club). You may check WBCP's website here.
Credits:
Writer/Producer/Director: Emmanuel Lerona
Voice Over: Joenell Blancaver
Poster: Emmanuel A. Lerona
Music: Sergei Bachmanininoff's "Vocalise" performed by David Garrett
DISCLAIMER: This is a mock campaign. The Wild Bird Club of the Philippines doesn't have an actual campaign similar to this but I aligned my project with the goals, mission, and vision of the club (since I also am a member of the club). You may check WBCP's website here.
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