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DPChallenge Forums >> Tips, Tricks, and Q&A >> Abstract or Not?
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06/03/2002 09:04:55 AM · #1
I need some help from some of you art critics... I need someone to tell me what classifies art as abstract? Are there certian specific characteristics that make it abstract?

Does abstract not mean 'difficult to understand'? Mabybe a touch outside of reality? I'm just curious because I have a comment or two that uses the word 'abstract' and I don't believe that my photo is abstract at all.... help me out here :)

06/03/2002 09:17:16 AM · #2
abstract (adjective)

not concrete: not relating to concrete objects but expressing something that can be appreciated intellectually.

Arts (nonrepresentational): not aiming to depict an object but composed with the focus in internal structure and form.

Hope this helps:-)
I guess its in the eye of the beholder.
06/10/2002 01:14:29 PM · #3
I''m certainly not an art critic, but I suppose I play one here.

I''ve made a few comments on photos relating to abstractness. Roughly, I call it abstract if the photo could just as well be of something that it isn''t. Sometimes a photo is quite nearly abstract, but there''s something concrete that slips in there, and does not allow me to suspend disbelief.

I''ll give you an example of something I thought to be abstract when I took it. In this photo for the "curves" challenge, I tried to take a photo of "curves" using a fence, not a picture of a fence. Curves is an abstract thing, a particular fence is not. I tried to focus the camera on the ground to avoid getting too much detail on the fence, though I doubt that was something I needed to worry about. Something that crept in is the foot in the lower left corner, and once I see that, I cannot force the photo to be abstract at all anymore; It''s now completely attached in my mind to a particular situation in the real world.

Sometimes a photo look like the subject is really the shape, structure, etc, of the physical object being photographed, rather than object itself. That''s when I call it abstract.




* This message has been edited by the author on 6/10/2002 1:15:17 PM.
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