We're all used to seeing our realities distorted through Photoshop by now. Or do you really think all that advertising content is actually a faithful representation of reality? Or that Britney is still seventeen.
Photography, ever since the first Daguerrotypes has been a reflection of reality through the photographers eye, and is, as such, not the objective reality that we are faced with daily. Rather it is the processed version of reality we experience through our own subjective filters.
The New York Times Alex Williams explores how the prevalence of Photo-editing software in our daily lives has changed the way we accept photographs, and how these edited snapshots of our lives affect our memory in retrospect.
Photography, ever since the first Daguerrotypes has been a reflection of reality through the photographers eye, and is, as such, not the objective reality that we are faced with daily. Rather it is the processed version of reality we experience through our own subjective filters.
The New York Times Alex Williams explores how the prevalence of Photo-editing software in our daily lives has changed the way we accept photographs, and how these edited snapshots of our lives affect our memory in retrospect.
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