Digital Photography vs Digital Art

5 years 6 months ago #606141 by Kyle-Kephart
When looking at art, we know it is something that is appreciated for its aesthetic value or emotional impact on an observer. Basing on the assumption that I will continue to hold that photography is an art I would like to see if it can be separated from digital art in a meaningful way. Digital photography has come especially close to blurring the lines recently, so let’s take a look at what makes these two mediums different. Digital Photography Photography started out well over a century ago with various types of film exposed to light focused through a lens. Today, the practice is the same in principle while we replace the plastic with electronics and silicon they still capture light through a glass lens. All this means is that photography is defined by how light is captured on a flat plane and recorded over a moment in time.  Since photography requires the artist to be on location to create it has to be some representation of reality. This prerequisite of traveling to different places has an impact on the photography being created because the artist, conditions, and location itself change over time. This also forces the artist/photographer to be bound to a timeline when expressing themselves through this medium. The creative side of photography comes from the subjective experience of the photographer. The mood, scene, and artistic vision changes from one artist to the next in photography even when presented with the same location on the same day. These variables make it difficult to create consistently compelling photographs in landscapes where our vision will rarely line up with the reality of a scene. A photographer has to come back until everything works out while a digital artist might force things to work out in photoshop later.The Grey Space The purist in photography will say that any image that round trips to photoshop dips its toes in digital art. While this is true some of the time, I would argue there is some grey area in this matter. Some common practices in photography like HDR and focus stacking allow the artist to push the boundaries of their equipment. Taking multiple images and stitching them together through different techniques have been around since the darkroom days. So long as a final image is created through a process trying to show a scene realistically there can be some artistic leeway in how it was achieved. That is art after-all!    When the work is done in post-production crosses a line for me is when it no longer accurately represents a location. Removing critical components of a scene, moving mountains, and bending reality makes me believe what is being created no longer firmly stands in digital photography and crosses into manipulation/digital art. Where you draw the line in this grey area between artistic mediums is for you to choose, but keep in mind there should be a little blurring of lines for intent as well. If the artist’s intent is to show a realistic vision vs the intent is more artistic the line may land differently.Digital Art When looking at things like digital art with photography as a context it typically involves a combination of many different elements/layers. The images created are more of a collage of things that work well together blended together seamlessly into a piece. Art is more loosely tied to the locations they might represent than the location is represented by the art. What this means is, the integrity of a location isn’t held in the way it is but more in how it can be beautiful or have a mood attached to it. The pushing and pulling of what reality was in an image become what the art represents and not the reality itself. The artist in digital art is the one communicating everything and the light is no longer what they are capturing. Rather, in contrast to photography, digital art manipulates and creates the lighting, color, and elements in a scene. Digital artists are no longer tied down by what reality is and are free to change relationships between elements to how they best suit their own vision. The milky way can move around the sky and they don’t have to wait for a perfect sunset because everything can be blended later in photoshop. Who needs to keep returning to a location or wait around for the light as a digital artist? You don’t!What does it really matter? When these two mediums are mixed up or used in conjunction with one another to define images it can damage the reputation of the art/artist. A photographer will never be able to do the things a digital artist can because they morally are tied into showing reality. A digital artist should never be held responsible for holding the same values of a photographer because they don’t intend to show reality, it is about their vision. It starts with the artist. We are responsible for being truthful and accurate with what we call ourselves and our images. If you manipulate scenes into showing something different than reality please be honest about it. Creating digital art through photography is not a bad thing. It is only bad if it isn’t candid or if it is bad art visually speaking. As photographers, we should let people know what it means to create photographic art. If we don’t educate those viewing our photographs in how it was done then there is little chance they will come to understand that value. If you live in the grey area yourself and struggle with your art’s identity in the medium, be honest. It is key to be transparent in business and in art because letting others know everything and letting them be the judge will prove more fruitful. If the visuals you produce are compelling enough they should shine through anyways!The Medium’s Merits Photography has been around for a while now as a practice. It helps to show a vision that is grounded in reality. In this way, it can show how the world we live in is beautiful, terrifying, amazing, and awesome. The challenges of finding and waiting for good light and compositions in photography makes it all that much more interesting when good art is created. There is also a moral integrity that a photographer has to keep when creating new images from capture through to the digital darkroom where it is all too easy to stray into moving pixels around and changing reality. This all goes to create value in the end product! Digital art doesn’t have to hold itself within any boundaries that can often pen in photographers creatively. It is freeing to be able to create anything that best fits your vision. Whether it is just changing a photograph slightly so that it gets rid of/adds various elements or creating an entire scene from scratch the possibilities are endless. The value in digital art that starts with or includes photography is that the artist can stay true to what they want to communicate with the viewer from start to completion without worry of breaking any rules. Final Thoughts It is good to know what different mediums of art are, especially when they can be so closely related, as digital photography and digital art are. Many will mix and match these two together, but the better educated you are on the subject you will be better able to decide on what separates them. As closely related they are, there are key differences that are crucial in discerning between them. With photography grounded in its relationship with reality, anything that strays too far away must no longer be considered true to its origins, but it can still hold up value as digital art. There is a line to draw, it is up to you to draw where it is for you in that grey area between digital photography and digital art.

If you would like to check out the original article and more of my writing please take a look at my blog at www.compellingimaging.com !


Photo Comments
,
5 years 6 months ago #606144 by Kyle-Kephart
When looking at art, we know it is something that is appreciated for its aesthetic value or emotional impact on an observer. Basing on the assumption that I will continue to hold that photography is an art I would like to see if it can be separated from digital art in a meaningful way. Digital photography has come especially close to blurring the lines recently, so let’s take a look at what makes these two mediums different. 

Digital Photography

Photography started out well over a century ago with various types of film exposed to light focused through a lens. Today, the practice is the same in principle while we replace the plastic with electronics and silicon they still capture light through a glass lens. All this means is that photography is defined by how light is captured on a flat plane and recorded over a moment in time. 

Since photography requires the artist to be on location to create it has to be some representation of reality. This prerequisite of traveling to different places has an impact on the photography being created because the artist, conditions, and location itself change over time. This also forces the artist/photographer to be bound to a timeline when expressing themselves through this medium.

The creative side of photography comes from the subjective experience of the photographer. The mood, scene, and artistic vision changes from one artist to the next in photography even when presented with the same location on the same day. These variables make it difficult to create consistently compelling photographs in landscapes where our vision will rarely line up with the reality of a scene. A photographer has to come back until everything works out while a digital artist might force things to work out in photoshop later.

The Grey Space

The purist in photography will say that any image that round trips to photoshop dips its toes in digital art. While this is true some of the time, I would argue there is some grey area in this matter. Some common practices in photography like HDR and focus stacking allow the artist to push the boundaries of their equipment. Taking multiple images and stitching them together through different techniques have been around since the darkroom days. So long as a final image is created through a process trying to show a scene realistically there can be some artistic leeway in how it was achieved. That is art after-all!   

When the work is done in post-production crosses a line for me is when it no longer accurately represents a location. Removing critical components of a scene, moving mountains, and bending reality makes me believe what is being created no longer firmly stands in digital photography and crosses into manipulation/digital art. Where you draw the line in this grey area between artistic mediums is for you to choose, but keep in mind there should be a little blurring of lines for intent as well. If the artist’s intent is to show a realistic vision vs the intent is more artistic the line may land differently.

Digital Art

When looking at things like digital art with photography as a context it typically involves a combination of many different elements/layers. The images created are more of a collage of things that work well together blended together seamlessly into a piece. Art is more loosely tied to the locations they might represent than the location is represented by the art. What this means is, the integrity of a location isn’t held in the way it is but more in how it can be beautiful or have a mood attached to it.

The pushing and pulling of what reality was in an image become what the art represents and not the reality itself. The artist in digital art is the one communicating everything and the light is no longer what they are capturing. Rather, in contrast to photography, digital art manipulates and creates the lighting, color, and elements in a scene. Digital artists are no longer tied down by what reality is and are free to change relationships between elements to how they best suit their own vision. The milky way can move around the sky and they don’t have to wait for a perfect sunset because everything can be blended later in photoshop. Who needs to keep returning to a location or wait around for the light as a digital artist? You don’t!

What does it really matter?

When these two mediums are mixed up or used in conjunction with one another to define images it can damage the reputation of the art/artist. A photographer will never be able to do the things a digital artist can because they morally are tied into showing reality. A digital artist should never be held responsible for holding the same values of a photographer because they don’t intend to show reality, it is about their vision.

It starts with the artist. We are responsible for being truthful and accurate with what we call ourselves and our images. If you manipulate scenes into showing something different than reality please be honest about it. Creating digital art through photography is not a bad thing. It is only bad if it isn’t candid or if it is bad art visually speaking. As photographers, we should let people know what it means to create photographic art. If we don’t educate those viewing our photographs in how it was done then there is little chance they will come to understand that value.

If you live in the grey area yourself and struggle with your art’s identity in the medium, be honest. It is key to be transparent in business and in art because letting others know everything and letting them be the judge will prove more fruitful. If the visuals you produce are compelling enough they should shine through anyways!

The Medium’s Merits

Photography has been around for a while now as a practice. It helps to show a vision that is grounded in reality. In this way, it can show how the world we live in is beautiful, terrifying, amazing, and awesome. The challenges of finding and waiting for good light and compositions in photography makes it all that much more interesting when good art is created. There is also a moral integrity that a photographer has to keep when creating new images from capture through to the digital darkroom where it is all too easy to stray into moving pixels around and changing reality. This all goes to create value in the end product!

Digital art doesn’t have to hold itself within any boundaries that can often pen in photographers creatively. It is freeing to be able to create anything that best fits your vision. Whether it is just changing a photograph slightly so that it gets rid of/adds various elements or creating an entire scene from scratch the possibilities are endless. The value in digital art that starts with or includes photography is that the artist can stay true to what they want to communicate with the viewer from start to completion without worry of breaking any rules. 

Final Thoughts

It is good to know what different mediums of art are, especially when they can be so closely related, as digital photography and digital art are. Many will mix and match these two together, but the better educated you are on the subject you will be better able to decide on what separates them. As closely related they are, there are key differences that are crucial in discerning between them. With photography grounded in its relationship with reality, anything that strays too far away must no longer be considered true to its origins, but it can still hold up value as digital art. There is a line to draw, it is up to you to draw where it is for you in that grey area between digital photography and digital art.


Photo Comments
,

817.3K

241K

  • Facebook

    817,251 / Likes

  • Twitter

    241,000 / Followers

  • Google+

    1,620,816 / Followers

Latest Reviews

Nikon’s retro-looking Nikon Zfc is anything but retro. Under its classic body is a host of features and amenities that make it a worthwhile compact mirrorless camera for 2024.

Apr 15, 2024

The Canon EOS R50 is one of the newest R-system cameras from Canon. Is it worth your money? Find out all the details you need to know in this comprehensive review.

Apr 10, 2024

The Sony FE 70-200mm f/2.8 GM OSS II is Sony’s flagship mirrorless zoom lens. As such, it’s loaded with features and has a top-shelf build quality that makes it a top pick!

Mar 27, 2024

The Leica SL2-S is an attractive, premium mirrorless camera with photo and video specs that are sure to impress. And with the legendary Leica name, you know this camera exudes quality!

Mar 26, 2024
Get 600+ Pro photo lessons for $1

Forum Top Posters

Latest Articles

The Olympus OM-D E-M10 Mark IV is a micro four thirds camera released in 2020. It’s an entry-level system along with the OM-D E-M5 Mark III. Use this guide to determine which one is best for you!

Apr 17, 2024

Blue hour photography might not be as well known as golden hour photography, but it is every bit as good a time to create epic images of landscapes. Learn how in this quick tutorial!

Apr 17, 2024

Nikon’s retro-looking Nikon Zfc is anything but retro. Under its classic body is a host of features and amenities that make it a worthwhile compact mirrorless camera for 2024.

Apr 15, 2024

Moving from taking snapshots of your dog to creating beautiful images doesn’t have to be that difficult! Use the tips outlined in this dog photography guide, and you’ll get better results in no time.

Apr 15, 2024

Acrylic print photos are a beautiful way to display your favorite images. But they don’t come without some questions. Get all the answers you need about this medium in this guide!

Apr 15, 2024

Where do you get your landscape photography inspiration? Is it from masters like Ansel Adams? Or perhaps viewing art from other genres? We’ve got these and a few other sources for you to check out!

Apr 10, 2024

The Canon EOS R50 is one of the newest R-system cameras from Canon. Is it worth your money? Find out all the details you need to know in this comprehensive review.

Apr 10, 2024

Too often, affordable online printing companies don’t meet your expectations of what a print should look like. But there are some choices that combine affordability with superb quality!

Apr 09, 2024