Vic Mitchell Photography
Traditional Photography in a Digital Age
Traditional photography doesn't have a clear definition other than
it does not involve the use of digital processes but instead uses
silver based film and paper at the core of its process. It is called
traditional because it represents the way photography has been done
since its origins and because it is the process closest to nature
herself.
With the emergence of digital processes there has been no clear
leadership from major museums, art historians, or photographic critics
regarding a distinction between the silver based photography that had
its beginnings in the 1880's and the computer based photography that
interestingly had its beginnings in the 1980's.
Why should anyone care? Art work has always been described and
valued in terms of its process. Traditional photographs are basically
handmade. Digital photography relies on silicon sensors, complex
electronics, hundreds of computer programmers, and machine made prints.
There are those that would have you believe that digital is just an
evolution of photography. For snapshots and commercial photography this
is true. As art it is a new process, in the same way as acrylic
paintings are separated from oil paintings. This is not to imply that
digitally produced work is inadequate, just that it is different.
If you are investing in fine art or are serious about art, you must
ask yourself would you prefer to invest in an original painting or a
poster of it?
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