dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Naturalism

The belief that pictures should seem like the real world "as it is." The concept posits that it is possible to create an image without the intervention of visual codes to mediate or interfere with the process.

The belief that pictures should seem like the real world "as it is." The concept posits that it is possible to create an image without the intervention of visual codes to mediate or interfere with the process.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Narrative

Telling a story to someone. If we are already aware of the tale, a single image may "trigger" a narrative. The portrayal of a historical event as a crucial moment, also known as history painting, is a tradition adopted by photography as the "decisive moment" of a scenario.

Telling a story to someone. If we are already aware of the tale, a single image may "trigger" a narrative. The portrayal of a historical event as a crucial moment, also known as history painting, is a tradition adopted by photography as the "decisive moment" of a scenario.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Modernism

A movement which argues that art can only become better with time because of the emphasis placed on learning and practicing new skills. The subject matter of pictures was often detached from the movement's rhetoric, which resulted in formalism (also known as "art for the sake of art") being the predominant narrative of the movement. It is often believed that modernism died out with the rise of postmodernism, but modernism has subsequently made a comeback as an essential component of contemporary art and the pluralist ideals it upholds.

A movement which argues that art can only become better with time because of the emphasis placed on learning and practicing new skills. The subject matter of pictures was often detached from the movement's rhetoric, which resulted in formalism (also known as "art for the sake of art") being the predominant narrative of the movement. It is often believed that modernism died out with the rise of postmodernism, but modernism has subsequently made a comeback as an essential component of contemporary art and the pluralist ideals it upholds.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Lens

The component of any camera with the most impact on the 'character' of the final picture captured by that camera. The size of the aperture is determined by the lens, which is responsible for the amount of light that enters the camera, the depth of field of focus, and the angle of view.

The component of any camera with the most impact on the 'character' of the final picture captured by that camera. The size of the aperture is determined by the lens, which is responsible for the amount of light that enters the camera, the depth of field of focus, and the angle of view.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Impressionism

A painting style popularized in the late 19th century that emphasized individual perspective and aimed to capture the dynamism of contemporary life.

A painting style popularized in the late 19th century that emphasized individual perspective and aimed to capture the dynamism of contemporary life.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Image

A picture or impression sent to a person’s mind of anything, whether real or imagined. Visual representations (drawings, paintings, photographs, films, data, etc.) are only one type of sensory experience. There are many types of sensory experiences, including words, sounds, smells, and others.

A picture or impression sent to a person’s mind of anything, whether real or imagined. Visual representations (drawings, paintings, photographs, films, data, etc.) are only one type of sensory experience. There are many types of sensory experiences, including words, sounds, smells, and others.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Halftone

The halftone method takes a photograph's continuous tones and turns them into discrete blocks of color. It takes a careful inspection or a magnifying glass to see the tiny dots. Electronic processing and digital printers have replaced the need for halftone processes in the modern printing industry.

The halftone method takes a photograph's continuous tones and turns them into discrete blocks of color. It takes a careful inspection or a magnifying glass to see the tiny dots. Electronic processing and digital printers have replaced the need for halftone processes in the modern printing industry.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Film

A light-sensitive strip of plastic or another material containing a chemical emulsion that must be treated before an image becomes visible. Accordingly, the film was developed and used during photography's "analog age," a term that has since become common parlance.

A light-sensitive strip of plastic or another material containing a chemical emulsion that must be treated before an image becomes visible. Accordingly, the film was developed and used during photography's "analog age," a term that has since become common parlance.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Exposure

A measure of how much light reaches a camera's photosensitive sensor. The relationship between the lens aperture (the quantity of light allowed into the camera) and the shutter speed determines how much light is admitted into the camera (the length of exposure time) and can be formulated as follows: aperture + shutter speed = exposure.

A measure of how much light reaches a camera's photosensitive sensor. The relationship between the lens aperture (the quantity of light allowed into the camera) and the shutter speed determines how much light is admitted into the camera (the length of exposure time) and can be formulated as follows: aperture + shutter speed = exposure.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Documentary

Supported by progressive social movements, designating efforts to preserve and chronicle the history of social organizations and the activities they engage in, as well as the social problems and situations that emerge. Photographs were used in a variety of ways by social documentary movements, such as the Mass Observation project of 1930s Britain, with essays, diaries, interviews, sound recordings, and a sophisticated incorporation of the same in film.

Supported by progressive social movements, designating efforts to preserve and chronicle the history of social organizations and the activities they engage in, as well as the social problems and situations that emerge. Photographs were used in a variety of ways by social documentary movements, such as the Mass Observation project of 1930s Britain, with essays, diaries, interviews, sound recordings, and a sophisticated incorporation of the same in film.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Document

This noun is usually associated with the concept of the photograph as a fact, which was initially proposed in the nineteenth-century concept of the photograph as evidence and then again, in a different context, as the new vision in the 1920s and 1930s and as 'new’ documents in the 1960s. The word "document" has been brought forward to reinvent the relationship between photography and reality.

This noun is usually associated with the concept of the photograph as a fact, which was initially proposed in the nineteenth-century concept of the photograph as evidence and then again, in a different context, as the new vision in the 1920s and 1930s and as 'new’ documents in the 1960s. The word "document" has been brought forward to reinvent the relationship between photography and reality.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Digital

This term refers to developing pictures via binary digits using an electronic numerical calculation process. The definition of photography as a separate "medium" within the computational culture and the new cultural arguments that develop from it are blurred due to this technological process, which is why discussions regarding the influence this approach has had on photography are often contentious.

This term refers to developing pictures via binary digits using an electronic numerical calculation process. The definition of photography as a separate "medium" within the computational culture and the new cultural arguments that develop from it are blurred due to this technological process, which is why discussions regarding the influence this approach has had on photography are often contentious.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Daguerreotype

Louis Daguerre invented an early method for producing photographic images with a light-sensitive coating of silver iodide applied to copper. After processing a picture using chemicals, the coating could be used to fix the image. The daguerreotype has a clarity that is just astonishing. Despite its extreme sharpness, the primary drawback was that both earlier photographic processes were more difficult to duplicate or reproduce than Fox Talbot's calotype or talbotype.

Louis Daguerre invented an early method for producing photographic images with a light-sensitive coating of silver iodide applied to copper. After processing a picture using chemicals, the coating could be used to fix the image. The daguerreotype has a clarity that is just astonishing. Despite its extreme sharpness, the primary drawback was that both earlier photographic processes were more difficult to duplicate or reproduce than Fox Talbot's calotype or talbotype.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Cyanotype

This is a technique for making prints in which the image source (such as an item, a negative, or a specimen) is put directly on the light-sensitive print paper (covered with iron salts), which is then treated after being exposed to direct light. It is easy to see the areas where the light has oxidized the surface of the paper because of the characteristic blue hue. In 1842, Sir John Herschel came up with basis for the procedure that architects would later use to create blueprint drawings of structures.

This is a technique for making prints in which the image source (such as an item, a negative, or a specimen) is put directly on the light-sensitive print paper (covered with iron salts), which is then treated after being exposed to direct light. It is easy to see the areas where the light has oxidized the surface of the paper because of the characteristic blue hue. In 1842, Sir John Herschel came up with basis for the procedure that architects would later use to create blueprint drawings of structures.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Contemporary art and photography

This term developed in the 1990s to describe the rising popularity that contemporary art was no longer linked by a single "modern" aesthetic, but represented a worldwide range of influences. The plurality can be partly attributed to the fact that it is engaged with concepts, principles, and customs from all over the globe. However, it could also be because artists from all over the world, as well as artists from local communities, are now regularly recycling ancient and traditional practices in new ways, sometimes in direct opposition to their initial notions, by combining them with their antitheses or dissolving their principles into new hybrid forms.

This term developed in the 1990s to describe the rising popularity that contemporary art was no longer linked by a single "modern" aesthetic, but represented a worldwide range of influences. The plurality can be partly attributed to the fact that it is engaged with concepts, principles, and customs from all over the globe. However, it could also be because artists from all over the world, as well as artists from local communities, are now regularly recycling ancient and traditional practices in new ways, sometimes in direct opposition to their initial notions, by combining them with their antitheses or dissolving their principles into new hybrid forms.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Conceptual art

In the 1960s and 1970s, there was a change in a culture far from the prevailing formalist aesthetics and the market-driven pursuit of a 'beautiful' image. Instead, it began with critical conceptions that originated in linguistic philosophy. These concepts problematized language, pictures, and the purpose of art objects in terms of their ability to influence the viewer’s understanding and perception. Some people consider conceptual art "anti-aesthetic" because it offers a different kind of pleasure, one that is more intellectual than visceral or visual. However, such boundaries have often become blurred in recent years.

In the 1960s and 1970s, there was a change in a culture far from the prevailing formalist aesthetics and the market-driven pursuit of a 'beautiful' image. Instead, it began with critical conceptions that originated in linguistic philosophy. These concepts problematized language, pictures, and the purpose of art objects in terms of their ability to influence the viewer’s understanding and perception. Some people consider conceptual art "anti-aesthetic" because it offers a different kind of pleasure, one that is more intellectual than visceral or visual. However, such boundaries have often become blurred in recent years.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Collage

Multiple images and other objects are put together and assembled in such a way as to create a new image. The new picture takes on the numerous meanings of its source images. However, it also combines all those meanings in a way similar to a kaleidoscope, creating several new meanings. Cubism, Constructivism, Surrealism, and Vorticism were all creative movements associated with the word and its practice, as were subsequent champions of concepts of a multidimensional reality. The term is frequently associated with montage or photomontage. Although these methods may overlap in certain cases, they typically have distinct goals and objectives.

Multiple images and other objects are put together and assembled in such a way as to create a new image. The new picture takes on the numerous meanings of its source images. However, it also combines all those meanings in a way similar to a kaleidoscope, creating several new meanings. Cubism, Constructivism, Surrealism, and Vorticism were all creative movements associated with the word and its practice, as were subsequent champions of concepts of a multidimensional reality. The term is frequently associated with montage or photomontage. Although these methods may overlap in certain cases, they typically have distinct goals and objectives.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More
dictionary Martin Kaninsky dictionary Martin Kaninsky

Camera vision

This not only refers to the fact that cameras only have one vision and the push to have people believe that machine vision is more 'objective' than human eyesight. This concept of digital reality proposes that the camera can see objects and is, as a result, less subjective and more objective than human vision and is encapsulated by Walter Benjamin's concept of the camera's "optical unconscious," which he developed in the 1930s.

This not only refers to the fact that cameras only have one vision and the push to have people believe that machine vision is more 'objective' than human eyesight. This concept of digital reality proposes that the camera can see objects and is, as a result, less subjective and more objective than human vision and is encapsulated by Walter Benjamin's concept of the camera's "optical unconscious," which he developed in the 1930s.


Do you have a better definition? Share it in the comments.


Read More