Michel Szulc Krzyzanowski said:
Because of the way we humans are, everything we do has a meaning, though most people are unaware of this.
Most things have a much deeper symbolic meaning that we read at a subliminal level but rarely at a conscious one.
This is how Advertising (and an awful lot else) works.
Frames around photos, signatures on prints, et al, all have deeper levels of meaning than the immediately obvious. Being aware of these deeper meanings and trying to understand them means that you can use them to advantage.
The alternative is to whistle in the dark, but some people are happier doing that.
Text by Hertz van Rental
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It is true that photography can serve as a psycho-therapy. Or as a tool for spiritual growing. Photography can be very effective for this, once the protagonist is aware of this knowledge and learns how to use it.
However, many make the mistake to think that the photographic results
are important for others because they were important for the photographer.
This can be observed in the field of art-photography.
Narcism of no importance to anyone else.
Nevertheless, there is a way to practise photography as a tool for a personal process of spiritual growing while also having meaning for a wide audience.
i agree and i disagree
not everything has symbolism of a greater meaning
but anything can be viewed as having meaning, ie: if you write out everything that comes to your mind, everything, without thought... yah know, a lot of it is merely train of thought, logic, which needs a conclusion or end point than a real answer... so you write 10 things that can have meaning, and 10 things that are totally random... the randomness can have meaning, but the things themselves cannot (unless you really push it), and of course, there's mistakes, if some photographer takes a photo and simply twitches and frames incorrectly to what he wanted, but finds out later that the framing is unbelievably better... there is no meaning, he twitched uncontrollably
most people who create art are attached in some way, even if they did it in .5 seconds with little thought, an artist will defend it because it's a product of their being, they're expressing themselves in some way, and when somebody attacks that expression, it means they're attacking the person that expressed it
hence things like projecting one's view of importance of their product on others, it's sometimes obnoxious and pretentious, but totally natural
gotta separate those who copy from those who think they're da bomb though, copying is a trait of learning, da bomb is arrogance