i am going to somewhat disagree on that last part. How a photographer feels about a picture they took may not ever change, nor should it if they feel they like it for whatever reason. If you post a candid photo of your child doing something that was personally special to you and got terrible reviews on it, would you suddenly stop thinking it is special and worth keeping just because some photographers pointed out all the technical or compositional flaws in it? Amolitor already stated that he knew he saw more in this picture than others would because he was there and saw parts of the scene we couldn't see in the picture. Unless i have missed a post somewhere, I am pretty sure Amolitor already admitted to this not being a great picture, just a picture he had personal interest in.
Your comparison is flawed. A picture of ones child invokes emotion that can be dear to the heart and remind one of a cherished moment making the quality of that picture irrelevant to the photographer. Whereas the pic in question holds no emotion.
I'm confused on something here. If the photographer saw something in the scene that we can't see, didn't he fail ? I mean the very Essenes of of photography is to capture and share, tell a store and so on...
why do you say that this picture holds no emotion? amolitor said he found it interesting, and it held more meaning to him than it would to other people.
he found it compelling enough to photograph even though he knew others would not find it as interesting.
so...is it not possible that this picture could, in fact, evoke an emotional response from him when he looks at it?
I would say then that the picture in question does hold emotion, even if only for amolitor.
a picture of someone elses kid holds zero importance or emotional attachment to ME, but i would not say that the picture holds no emotion, because it obviously does to someone. this picture could be no different.
unless of course, you know amolitor well enough to speak for his emotional attachments. I don't myself, im just guessing here.
I wouldn't call it a fail, per se.
its only a fail if the person that took the picture sees no value in it.
if someone paints a picture that only they like, but they enjoy looking at it, is it a fail?
the picture might fail to tell other people a story, or evoke an emotional response from others, but as long as the person that took the picture enjoys it, i cant personally call it a failure.