Day five of my weekly blogs
The photography genre might be a little bit confusing. For example, fine art photos are images that are created solely for images or for the aesthetic of it. It’s honestly the opposite of documentary photography. Documentary photography tends to capture photos of life, people, and significant events. When creating documentary images, you first have to create a plan to focus on the model’s identity. You want to make sure you highlight their personality rather than developing our own ideas and art. Fine art portraiture it’s the opposite because the art that you create or your ideas are more important than the model’s identity. When it comes to fine art, fine art is a border category than conceptual photography. Which means not all fine art is conceptual. Some conceptual pictures may resemble fine art portraits. But the difference here is that conceptual portraits represent a specific idea such as any emotion you want to add, however, fine art portraits may have no specific meaning.

Still-life photography is another genre between fine art and documentary photography. The difference is the purpose of the photo and the value of the subject. Some photographers tend to take their photos in a studio setting so they can develop and control all the details of a shoot. Fine art nature and landscape photography have become popular due to the image editors which allows photographers to easily alter the appearance of a scene. When it comes to architecture photography you can’t bring it into the studio. Architecture photography is more of an outside door in order to find unique angles, and you develop ideas that you communicate through the images. The University of Arizona is recognized and known for being one of the world’s finest academic art museums and study centers for the history of photography.
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