Just as Google launches, Google+, it’s latest attempt at a social network and an attempt to lure people away from Facebook, I thought I would share a piece that I have written for the latest issue of European Photography (which comes out today) that deals with the impact of blogs and social networks on the way we consume and understand photography. If you are interested in looking further into the online photography world I also recommend checking out the previous issue of European Photography (no. 88) on ‘Net Photography’ which investigates some of the trends in photography that is being produced specifically for and distributed through the web.
Blogs have always been fragile creatures: statistics show that around 70% of them die within their first month. And now, only a decade after they first appeared, some are concerned that they are becoming an endangered species. While I am relatively new to blogging (I started eyecurious in April 2009), even in my short virtual lifetime a lot has changed. Particularly in the last year, a significant part of the online activity relating to photography has moved to online social networks such as Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr. So are we witnessing the demise of the blog? As with most of these dichotomous debates linked to technology (printed versus digital books, analog versus digital photography, etc.) I think the question is not so much whether (or when) the new will kill off the old, but rather how they are influencing each other. More specifically, what impact is the rise of social networks having on the online conversation on photography?
In a recent piece Andy Adams summarised the impact of blogs and social networks as follows, “web 2.0 is influencing contemporary photo culture around the world by connecting international audiences to art experiences, enabling the discovery of new work and presenting never-before-seen channels of expression and communication.” Blogs, webzines and now social networks have made photography far more accessible than before. We are no longer dependent on museums, galleries and books for photographic content. This not only makes it cheaper and easier to get our hands on photographs, but we can now see far more images than are available through these ‘traditional’ forms. The web makes it just as easy to access photographs being made outside our front door as on the other side of the globe, as well as work that has yet to be exhibited or published and often never will.
What truly characterises web 2.0 however is participation: the opportunity for everyone to share information and to get involved in a conversation. Although I think the internet is at its best when it creates discussion and debate, the vast majority of online activity still centres around the dissemination of information. Even within a tiny universe such as the ‘fine art photography’ (for want of a better term) community, the accessibility of the web quickly leads to an overwhelming amount of photographic content. Blogs, online magazines and increasingly social networks act as filters, allowing people to more easily find the content that most interests them. Social networks have further refined this process, not only making it easier to find the kind of photography we want, but also providing a platform on which to have a conversation around photographs. These networks create spaces for discussion around specific topics or fields of interest that just aren’t possible on the infinite plain of the broader world wide web.
So what is the downside? Most of us would agree that better access and more conversation sounds like a pretty good thing. However, while these online developments have been leading to more conversation, I would argue that they have also been making it more shallow. Take the example of Facebook. While the platform does allow for discussion, the structure of the Facebook platform is such that we are constantly being asked to like things, whether it be through ‘Fan Pages’ or simply by choosing to ‘Like’ something that someone else has posted. While I don’t think a ‘Dislike’ button would add anything to the quality of the online conversation, it would at least remind us that our reactions to photography don’t all have to be situated on scale running from good to awesome.
Twitter is a slightly different beast. With its 140-character limit, the network is intrinsically suited to point towards existing information rather than to create new content. Even in the case where a conversation develops between several users (‘tweet chats’ in the local jargon), the medium is entirely focused on immediacy and not on considered opinion. By the time you have finished reading a tweet there are already several others that have appeared in your Twitter feed demanding your attention.
The reason this matters to photography is that it can lead to a situation where we are constantly consuming and never digesting. The danger with the infinite accessibility of the web is that we can find ourselves only looking at photographs that are immediately seductive or simply popular in the networks around us. Work that might be deemed quiet, challenging or even just off-putting can get totally bypassed. Moreover, if our interaction with photography is limited to a ‘Like’ button or the 140-character equivalent, we run the risk of never getting beyond the surface of images and of not developing an understanding of why we like or dislike something. Given the demise of arts criticism in traditional media, this kind of critical thought is arguably more important than ever.
Fortunately there are many online examples that buck the trend. Blogs like Pete Brook’s Prison Photography and Beierle + Keijser’s Mrs Deane are endless sources of hidden gems and considered discussion of current photographic trends. Perhaps the two most encouraging examples are Charlotte Cotton’s 2008 Words Without Pictures and more recently, Foam’s What’s Next?, both vital spaces which use the participatory nature of the net for considered thought and conversation on what is happening in photography today and where this might be leading.
Some might argue that an overly analytical discussion of photographs can get in the way of images. But without a critical discussion, what is going to lead photography to evolve and move forward?





7 Comments
Since I wrote this on FB, I figured I might as well add it here as well….
Good article Marc. Criticism doesn’t sell which is why I don’t think we see more of it. Just recently I had an engaging debate on the FPN and the negative blowback from it made me question whether it was really worthwhile. I think there’s a tendency online to shut out people that you don’t agree with. I do this. I’ve unsubscribed to blogs simply because I found the tone off putting.
In photoland I think the problem is exacerbated because bloggers and editors tend to be fellow photographers so being overly critical of others work can be seen as bad karma. It’s a culture of “I’ll scratch your back if you scratch mine.”
There’s such a mad rush for attention that I think it makes people conservative in their approach to social media, blogging and publishing. You highlighted a few good blogs, and I think Colberg isn’t afraid to stir things up. But guys like him have a reached a tipping point so even if they alienate a few, they’re still ok.
I have plenty of criticism of what’s happening online with blogs and magazines but I’m not going write about it because many of these people are friends as well. Also, those in glass houses and such. I just try to focus on what I’m doing and figuring out ways to differentiate lpv. It’s not easy because the content faucet is on full blast 24/7 and there are some incredibly smart people out hustling day in and day out.
Lastly, and this maybe the most important, criticism is bloody difficult. I think if you do write critically you need to take it seriously. I haven’t studied the history of photography. I haven’t read all the books. So I’d feel kind of foolish being critical of a body of work without having a deep understanding of context and history.
Then again, I’m not all that interested in photography criticism either, and I suspect many others share that sentiment. It’s not exactly the type of writing that pulls in the audiences…
Well said!!!
“…The reason this matters to photography is that it can lead to a situation where we are constantly consuming and never digesting.”
Couldn’t agree more!!
In fact I think that there is far too much euphoria around the hip new world of social networking and Co.
By all means, I too believe that we’re in front of a revolution in massive scale (in terms of global reach), but this “universality” it’s only for a relatively limited audience. We tend to think that we’re in the centre, but this centre is only very relative. Basically, if we confuse the online platforms as a reached destination, we would risk to hang on the wall the hammer and nails!
another example that bucks the trend: SFMOMA has posted the participant texts, and five hours of video and transcripts from their symposium “Is Photography Over”. Compelling stuff.
http://www.sfmoma.org/about/research_project/research_projects_photography_over
yikes. corrected link:
http://www.sfmoma.org/about/research_projects/research_projects_photography_over
One of the reasons I have resisted Facebook is the hunch of precisely what you have pinpointed. I know that I’m going against the trend here, but knowing a bit about myself, I suspect that I have more to lose than to gain with it. I already consume more photography than I am able to digest with things as they are (that is, not being able to access Fb pages) so why add another source of mega-distraction?
Of course there’s a valid point in “It’s not the tools, but the way you use them”. I agree, I just prefer not to have to exercise the necessary self-control implicit in their existence. However, as we say in Spanish: “Never say from this water I will not drink “, I might at some point yield to the trends . But put to choose, I’m a sucker for intelligent blogs, as the ones you mention. And if it was always possible, through history, to make art while not being so excessively ultra-connected, do we really need to know what’s going on everywhere and make use of the whole gammut of possible platforms?
I think you make a very interesting point about the way that art was produced in the past. Today’s hyper-connectivity and immediate access to everything is very different from that. It must make it quite difficult to do something that is very much your own in that context. I know a few photographers who look at very little photography books or exhibitions anymore because it interferes with their own process, let alone look at photography online.
Well written, Marc. Your essay refers to photography but I think the issue applies to society as a whole. Everything that we consume, whether it’s knowledge, product, or photography, is increasingly packaged as a disposable item. We use it quickly, undigested, then look for more. The rise of Twitter/Facebook/Tumblr in the photography world simply mimics this model.
I see a split between this world –the short attention span online photo community– and the traditional world of galleries/museums/reviews, which generally has more leisure to consider things. There is some overlap but increasingly they seem to coming from different places. At Photolucida a few months ago I was surprised how little represented the online world was. There were a few bloggers including myself but not many. It was mainly an old fashioned back-slapping convention which could’ve taken place 20 years ago. So maybe there is still a place for long-form thinking.
2 Trackbacks
[...] – Artigo recente de Marc Feustel sobre este assunto. [...]
[...] ‘You like this‘ at eye curious Share this:FacebookTwitterShareEmailStumbleUponPrintDiggRedditLinkedIn [...]