JC1220 said:
But, there is more to viewing a photograph than just a meaning, it is about an entire experience around the viewing in which there are a myriad of points where some may be the same as others, but not all will be the same making for a unique experience, good, bad, indifferent or anywhere in between.
This is merely describing the process of giving meaning!
You have obviously not yet realised that
everything we do in life we try to give meaning to, including our life itself.
The whole process of viewing an image therefore has meaning, the image being the focus and catalyst for that meaning.
JC1220 said:
Should a viewer feel the love and care you put into making a photograph, yes, does a good photographer have the ability to connect with the viewer on the deeper level of lifes patterns and rhythms, yes. And this is what is most important about truly fine art, invoking those deep feelings and connections with our viewers; it goes way past meanings and ideas.
You have just expressed an intention to put 'love and care' into your images.
You have also just expressed the desire for the viewer to 'feel' the 'love and care' you have put in to your image.
At the risk of pointing out the obvious, you have just said that you would like to communicate something to your audience. If they experience what you want them to then you have succeeded, if they do not then you have failed.
It is not a matter of whether you agree with this or nor, or whether you consciously desire it - it is an inescapable fact.
JC1220 said:
Why do I photograph?: This is something I will have to sum up as there are many reasons, but the strongest are the life experiences and growth around my photography, the experience of seeing the photograph complete on the ground glass (not talking about pre-visualizing the final print here) is an intense and deeply satisfying and pleasurable experience; that is what it is all about for me. The picture is the bonus.
If the whole point is just 'seeing the photograph complete on the ground glass' then why bother recording it on film?
Surely that is superfluous?
The only possible reason that you record your image is to share what you experience with others - in effect, communication.
Your pictures can therefore be judged by whether they succeed in doing this or not.
That you have not realised that this is why you do what you do is a failing in you. You are not alone. A great many people who do photography do not realise that what they are trying to do when they take a picture is to communicate.
Communication does not have to be about language per se, or at least not language in the written or spoken sense. Remember that writing came out of symbolic or pictorial representation and speech came about from trying to explain what we see.
Your whole view of Photography appears to be purely mechanistic. You see no connection between the subject and yourself, yourself and the photograph, the photograph and the viewer, the viewer and their experience. All would appear to be discrete and isolated acts within your Universe and all totally random in nature.
There is far more going on than that, only you are not seeing it. But as long as you are happy it doesn't matter.
That is all I have to say on this matter.