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What are these artists doing? Taking photos?
Is the show curated in a way that doesn't differentiate between your objectives and theirs?
What bothers me is that the managers of the galleries seem relatively oblivious to any need for technical execution supporting the art. The work looks good in description and from a distance but, too often, up close the impact is destroyed by terrible execution and lack of skills.
That is a common trope among faux artists, that they are above the mere technical execution. It is a way of excusing their inability and their lack of knowledge. It's a great time saver not to actually have to 'know' anything or be able to 'do' anything with any degree of skill.
It is the equivalent of those at the other end of the arc who want to make believing oneself to be an 'artist' to be a pretentious pose, that their skills are enough. Their behavior is to say, I am just a plain, honest craftsman, doing beautiful things and not a poseur who needs a title. I'm doing the work and my beautiful work is all that there is or needs to be.'
It is a way of excusing or justifying their own choices by denying there is anything more.
As far as craftsmanship and art go, the artist need only know enough to produce their vision for a piece to be successful.
Ironically, it is typically the vision/idea that is lacking, and not the craftsmanship. There are plenty of well-crafted images that say very little about their subjects. If given a choice, I would prefer to see an image that lacks in craftsmanship but explodes in vision/idea over one that is perfectly crafted, and utterly meaningless.
I couldn't agree with this more. It has become my belief that technical execution is irrelevant unless it hurts appreciation of the artist's vision.
Artists can use photography as their means of expression, the difficulty is that there must be something that the artist wants to say or show. Just recording what one sees, no matter how nicely it is done, how pretty the scene, how difficult the shot, is not art.
Art is creation, not copying.
As a photographer, I'm not an artist. I take pictures of things so I represent them faithfully to the public I'm selling to. I don't feel like the way I do it is really artistic, and that the camera's more of a tool than anything else in these circumstances.
As an artist, I know that I don't have the ability to get what I see onto that sensor and into that memory card quite yet. I try, and I'm getting far better, but I'm not sure if I need more specialized equipment or just more skills (well, more skills is a definite) and more education to achieve my goals with more regularity. My gut says... go for the education and skills first, then get the equipment.
Eventually you will get to the point where you will be unsatisfied with just copying and you will try to translate your feelings and ideas onto the sensor. Guaranteed not everything will work.