Say cheese! How bad photography has changed our definition of good pictures

It's generally agreed that just about everyone today is a photographer to the extent that just about everyone carries a smartphone. Less understood, though, is how essential failures and mistakes have been to the evolution of what we think of as good photography. Kim Beil's recent book, Good Pictures: A History of Popular Photography (Stanford University Press, 2020) connects these dots, explaining how the technological shortcomings of early photographs were overcome before being embraced generations later by professional photographers searching for effects that conferred amateur authenticity.

From the article in Collectors Weekly:

A second type of failure concerns effects that largely began as mistakes produced by legions of amateur photographers shooting pictures with their new, boxy, Kodak cameras, which made their debut in 1888. Foremost among these failures were motion blur and lens flare. Once upon a time, both were frowned upon by the authors of the "How to Make Good Pictures" books. Thus, a blurry background while trying to capture a moving object, or a blurry object moving across an in-focus background, were considered mistakes that a few simple techniques could help you correct.

Shooting into a light source and thus drenching precious photographic real estate in overexposed rays of light was also considered a no-no. But just as sports photographers would eventually have a ball with motion blur, fashion and advertising photographers would eventually go crazy for lens flare. Intention created context.

"Intention is central to the way I think about art, and maybe even how we define it," Beil agrees. "Take lens flare: I think the power of lens flare comes from its initial unintentional use by people who were just taking casual pictures without any premeditation, without much intention." In these sorts of photographs, Beil says, lens flare was an amateur mistake that conferred "a kind of authenticity to an image." That's why advertisers find lens flare so appealing. "Because we still associate it with authenticity," Beil says, "it makes an advertising photo seem more real, maybe even spontaneous."

Today, lens flare is so widely used, so intentional, that billions of smartphone cameras offer multiple variations of this former failing in the form of filters, which can be activated with a click or a swipe. "Everything can be achieved and there are no more accidents," Beil says of photography in the 2020s, "so photographers look to things that happened before to reinsert some kind of authenticity into their pictures." Thanks to technology, photographers can now pretend to take pictures as if they lacked the tools to make their pictures, well, good.