Philosophy of Photography

ISSN: 2040-3682

13 found

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  1.  12
    The uncanniness of interactive photography: Exploring spatial perception in virtual tours and structure from motion.Doron Altaratz - 2024 - Philosophy of Photography 15 (1):47-60.
    Photography has always been associated with the physical activity of the human body: capturing, editing and viewing photos are all activities that involve the user’s spatial interaction with the technology used. With conventional photography, one aspect of spatial relation with technology is the viewer’s ability to recognize the camera’s location in the photographic scene through visual indications, such as the relative location of objects in the frame to the camera’s point of view, combined with a basic familiarity with the functionality (...)
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  2.  14
    vegetal/digital: Photogrammetry point-clouds of Australian flowers.Alison Bennett - 2024 - Philosophy of Photography 15 (1):61-77.
    Arising out of the heightened sensory perceptions of extended lockdown, this creative investigation began with contemplation of flowering street-trees. Through 262 days of lock down, residents of Melbourne retreated to the hyper-local, often reinforced by a 5-km travel bubble and a one-hour daily time limit outdoors. The sublime ephemeral springtime flowers of street-trees were amplified by the extreme sensory and social constraints of social distancing. Drawing us into a suspended moment of slow encounter, we attuned to the contained glowing pulse (...)
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  3.  16
    Photography as clouds: Notes toward the possibility of spatial photography.Roi Boshi - 2024 - Philosophy of Photography 15 (1):9-26.
    Many recent visual and technological changes in photography are related to the fact that it is increasingly connected to space through computerization and digitization. Photographs no longer appear as framed 2D images, but rather resemble a cloud whose viewing and operating mode necessarily involve navigation. My purpose in this article is to think about photography’s ontological and epistemological status through its contemporary spatial uses. Using two projects by Forensic Architecture, I examine two methodologies of spatial photography – photogrammetric point clouds (...)
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  4.  10
    Towards a photographic representation of the experience of seeing: Synthetic views via neural radiance fields.Andrew Burrell - 2024 - Philosophy of Photography 15 (1):79-93.
    This article looks at the emerging technology of the neural radiance field (NeRF) and suggests that this means of digital image production, when used by a creative practitioner, produces an emergent aesthetic – a result of the affordances inherent in the digital materiality of the NeRF and its processes. The use of this machine-learning technology as a material for creating images can lead to an entirely new way of creating photographic representations that provide us with a way of seeing and (...)
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  5.  13
    Disappearance of the face: From early photography to facial recognition systems.Martin Charvát - 2024 - Philosophy of Photography 15 (1):159-172.
    In this article I analyse the hidden genealogical link between portrait photography, used for criminological and psychiatric purposes, and contemporary systems of biometric identification of the human face. The aim is to highlight the shift between the emphasis on the importance of the human ‘expert eye’ in recognizing the face when talking about nineteenth-century photography and the use of computer technology that produces and reads digital facial images. In both cases, however, these are modes and variants of reducing and flattening (...)
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  6.  15
    Analog(ue) photography.Frances Cullen - 2024 - Philosophy of Photography 15 (1):113-121.
    This encyclopaedia entry defines ‘analog(ue) photography’ as a construct of the digital age. After first situating the concept’s history in relation to that of the larger field of ‘the analog’, thereby exposing its connection to the American field of cybernetics, the entry describes how analog photography’s identity as a synonym for film was initially constructed and has subsequently evolved. Then it elaborates on the category’s formulation as a site of resistance to emerging technologies. Analog photography’s ongoing usage, the entry suggests, (...)
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  7.  9
    The first frame: A camera-less photographic encounter with the foetus.Cherine Fahd - 2024 - Philosophy of Photography 15 (1):95-112.
    This article examines two first-hand encounters with the foetus to reflect on the familial, photographic and political dimensions of 3D and 4D foetal portraits. It examines the photographic status of foetal portraits as intimates of the family album while acknowledging their public meaning in reproductive politics. The article aims to situate 3D and 4D foetal portraits within photographic history, theory and practice by examining how these camera-less images align with photographic vision.
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  8.  33
    Navigating subjectivity in AI-generated photography: The quest for ethics and creative agency.Paula Gortázar - 2024 - Philosophy of Photography 15 (1):143-157.
    This study identifies alternative models for the production of AI-generated images to those currently used by mainstream AI platforms. Based on primitive computational art processes, these systems allow designers to gain greater control over the final visual result while avoiding potential issues with intellectual property theft and breach of privacy. The article starts by analysing the level of artificiality that might be effectively attributed to each part of the creative process involved in the development of AI-generated images. It then moves (...)
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  9.  11
    Questions of (un)framedness in the post-cinematic road movie/travelogue.Helen Kirwan & Simon Pruciak - 2024 - Philosophy of Photography 15 (1):27-46.
    Image of the Road (Kirwan and Pruciak 2013–2015) and Virtual Realis (Pruciak 2023) are travelogue video projects selected as a vantage point from which to examine our understanding of image since the disappearance of the frame and collapse of the cinematic form in VR video. Exploring the concept ‘frame’ in dialogue with theories of cinema and VR and an analysis of VR video’s characteristics, we question whether it may effect changes of perception and new understandings of the road as a (...)
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  10.  5
    Operational Images: From the Visual to the Invisual, Jussi Patikka* (2023).Laliv Melamed - 2024 - Philosophy of Photography 15 (1):187-192.
    Review of: Operational Images: From the Visual to the Invisual, Jussi Patikka (2023) Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 276 pp., ISBN 978-1-51791-211-6, p/bk, e-book, $29.00.
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  11.  27
    Synthography: A term for synthetically created photo-realistic images.Elke Reinhuber - 2024 - Philosophy of Photography 15 (1):173-186.
    With the advent of AI-generated photorealistic images in easily accessible online resources, synthetic imaging suddenly is widely discussed, obscuring the quiet revolution that has transformed image-making in the digital realm over the last decades. ‘The decisive moment’ has been taken out of the photographer’s hands a long time ago and the numerous automatic mechanisms integrated into the apparatus and the editing pipeline question the idea of sole authorship. This reassessment and re-evaluation of photographic images demands for a precise, differentiated description (...)
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  12.  7
    Expanded visualities: Photography and emerging technologies.Theopisti Stylianou-Lambert, Kleanthis Neokleous & Andrew Fisher - 2024 - Philosophy of Photography 15 (1):3-8.
    This editorial introduces the Special Double Issue of Philosophy of Photography (15.1&2), which focuses on the impact of novel technologies on photography and through this on our understanding of the contemporary world. It sketches the contents of the featured articles and articulates some of the technical developments, concerns and questions that inform and link them.
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  13.  18
    From outer space to latent space.Emilie K. Sunde - 2024 - Philosophy of Photography 15 (1):123-142.
    Dall-E2 and Stable Diffusion promote their text-to-image models based on their level of (photo)realism. The use of photographic language is not superficial or accidental but indicative of a broader tendency in computer science and data practice. To nuance the general application of photorealism, I position the term alongside photographic realism and computational photorealism. To contextualize important nuances between these three terms, contemporary examples from astrophotography are analysed and reconstructed using text-to-image models. From the comparative analysis, computational photorealism emerges as a (...)
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