In my paintings I will not borrow the color arrangement in these photographic compositions. I will not reproduce the detail that is recognizably in these pictures. Turneffe Flats Adventure Guide, Abel Coe, gave those of us who he took snorkeling permission to publish his pictures on the internet or publish them in a book if we give him a copy. Yet copying his pictures in paint is plagiarism. And also important is the split second exposure makes a picture frozen in time unlike how I am experienced it.
Anything you put on canvas or print is a moment in time. It's what we as buyers of the images want with a painting or a photograph for our walls. I don't see the problem so long as it's our own work. I rarely have any photo stay the composition that the camera gave it. These days, it's also easy to take out whatever distracts from my vision for it. Zen is what we seek, that moment in time. Of course, if instead of a happening, it's an emotion, that's a whole different problem.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely Western paintings in the past were close to being a moment in time. Thanks for expressingan idealic opinion.
ReplyDeleteThe act of making a painting might be a momment in time. Chinese paintings made before cameras depicted landscapes from three points and sometimes depicted four seasons in one painting. Asian influences are well documented in the 20th century Western Modernist movements.
In a painting that takes two houw to paint, a span of different emotions often emerge.