null
Photography: The Art That Captures the Human Condition

Photography: The Art That Captures the Human Condition

Apr 8th 2021

No medium in the art world can capture the pureness of a moment or its subject like photography can!

No matter what race, religion, or where one comes from, one thing connects us all. The human condition. The human condition encompasses the sum of the experience of being human and living the human life. Artists worldwide working in every medium strive to capture the human condition. Photography is the one medium that captures it like no other.

Early Photography and the Human Condition

In its early history, photography was not considered art because of its reliance on a form of technology that a camera is. When it was realized that photography was not just an automatic process but the ability of the photographer to bring creativity to an image through his eyes, photography became recognized as the most important invention since the printing press. As photography evolved and more advances were made, it became recognized as a form of artistic expression.

The rise of photographic societies around the world were the first sign that photography was being seen as an art. In 1853 the Photographic Society was formed in London. Shortly after, the Société Française de Photographie was founded in Paris, France. By the end of the 19th century photographic societies were popping up across the world in countries like India and in Eastern Europe. While they were formed to promote photography in general, some were dedicated strictly to artistic expression. It was the creation of these societies that paved the way for the early photography journals, the first of which was the Journal of the Photographic Society.

After viewing the first photographic journal, miniature painter sir William Newton argued that photographs could only be useful if they were taken in accordance with the principles of Fine Art. It was Newton who suggested a photographer throw their subject slightly off focus to make it more of work of art. In response to Newton’s criticisms, photographers began to combine several negatives to create one print, pushing photography beyond its capabilities. It paved the way for the print The Two Ways of Life being shown in the Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition and subsequently purchased by Queen Victoria for Prince Albert.

It was O.G. Rejlander, a Swedish photographer practicing in London, that can be credited for changing how people viewed photography with the sale of Two Ways of Life, a print that made him famous. Fading Away, a five-negative print, was the title of the photograph taken of a dying girl. Critics spoke out about the subject being too painful to be represented by photography. It was believed the purity of the camera created a stir despite paintings capturing far more painful subjects over the years. Even still, those who have studied the history of photography claim the photograph of the dying girl was the beginning of photography as an art that could capture the human condition.

Painters, Sculptors, and the Human Condition

The sculptor Rodin began his commission The Gates of Hell in 1880, a laboratory of the human condition, in which he captured various states and emotions in bronze and clay. The famous piece The Kiss was part of that commission as was The Thinker and Eternal Spring.

On stone walls or canvases, paintings are the medium many artists choose to capture the human condition as they interpret it. Leonardo DaVinci is credited with showing humanity at its most vulnerable in his rendering The Foetus in the Womb. No matter the condition or experience, it is one all of mankind can connect to. Like many experiences that connect us as humans, we all have the same beginning in the womb. No painting in the world embodies the human condition that is cruelty and violence as does the famous painting of Caravaggio, The Beheading of St. John the Baptist.

While the painting captures a most horrific moment, photography’s ability to capture the human condition can stir people to act. 

So indeed, no medium in the art world can capture the pureness of a moment or its subject like photography can.

Products In This Article