What do you think is currently missing?
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A single calibrated screen.
“Every photo tells a story”
He was Chinese
Seeing accurate colours on a screen depends on your working environment as well as the display.
Get a monitor calibration device and create profiles for wherever you intend to do colour-critical work.
If you just want make sure your pictures look the same on you phone as they do on your MacBook, then don’t do anything because it’s not feasible. All screens are different.
I did a test for this exact thing a few weeks ago: CRT exposure test
My set up was:
- Commodore 64 CRT display
- HDMI to RCA adapter to get still images on screen
- 6x9 view camera with 135/5.6 lens
- Portra 160, 8s @ f16.
Much more controlled than just taking a photo of an old TV that happens to be on, but might still be of interest.
Don’t tell me you took the lens out of the box and plastic wrap.
The example at the end of that document, recomposing the photograph with rule of thirds, produces a worse photograph, in my opinion.
Well, as an award winning photographer, I think you’re right.
Is photography real anymore
Just as real as anything else. It just happens to be a flat thing with tone and colour that you can look at, like a painting or a map.
Are we really capturing a true image of reality when we press that shutter release button, or is it just an approximation of reality?
A photograph is just an abstract representation of light and surface from a point view, it's up to the viewer to decide if it depicts something 'real'.
And, where / when do we (I, you, or whomever) draw the line between a 'photograph' and a 'graphic arts project'?
I useful way to describe photography is "lens-based arts" - that draws a relatively clear line in the sand.
Photomontage has also been a thing for a long time, one of the earliest examples being the Cottingley Fairies. Whether it is achieved in camera, in the darkroom or on a computer doesn't seem to matter much.
Lastly, while historically artistic value has always been a criteria for evaluation of a photograph, has this criteria changed now such that it allows for incorporation of elements which aren't real, or aren't possible?
This can be answered by responses to the other questions, but if you showed me a "pure" photograph, I could turn it around and show you a photograph that "isn't real" and describe the ways the light and materials have been manipulated along the way.
It's worth mentioning that truth and reality can exist in purely fictional compositions. There is no bright line between clearly real, or purely documentary, and total fantasy... it's a broad spectrum.
OK. What is your plan, your roadmap, or your vision?