Can a Photograph Tell a Story?

Wie so viele philosophische Auseinandersetzungen in unserem Haus begann alles mit einer Tasse heißen Tees. Dina hatte ihre Naturfotos auf dem ganzen Tisch ausgebreitet. Seehunde starrten gedankenversunken in den Nebel, ein Hase war mitten im Sprung erstarrt, und Pilze glänzten wie kleine Laternen im Wald. Selma studierte all das mit der ernsten Miene einer Kunstkritikerin im Louvre.
Klar kann ein Foto eine Geschichte erzählen!” betonte Dina.
Selma nickte bestätigend. “Natürlich kann es! Im dem Moment, in dem du ein Foto siehst, beginnst du zu fragen, was zuvor geschah. Was kommt als nächstes? Warum fühlt sich das eigenartig bekannt an?”

Für Dina, deren Fotografie sich um intime Momente in der Natur dreht, liegt das Erzählen einer Geschichte weniger in Handlung als in der Atmosphäre. Ein Seehund, der seinen Kopf zum Meer dreht, wird zum Bild der Mediation des Verschwindens. Ein einsamer Hase im winterlichen Gras weist auf Überleben, Verletzlichkeit und vielleicht gar auf Existenzangst – obwohl, ehrlich gesagt, die Hasen sich mehr um Praktisches kümmern.
Ein einzelnes Bild kann eine gesamte Welt beinhalten“, insistiert Dina.

Dina, yesterday morning: I have never seen a hare lying down like this. It was the highlight of my early morning visit to the hare fields, a fleeting moment. A single expression or a rare posture like this can communicate more quickly than paragraphs.

Genau an diesem Punkt betritt Kb die Küche, was stets herausfordernd ist, wenn es um philosophische Überlegungen geht.
Völliger Quatsch“, meint er sogleich im Tone eines Wissenden. “Ein Foto kann niemals eine Geschichte erzählen.”
Siri ist erfreut, denn Konflikt ist ihre bevorzugte Kunstform. Ohne Konflikte entsteht kein tieferes Verständnis, ist ihr Credo.
Eine Fotografie kann nicht in gleicher Weise eine Geschichte wie ein Roman oder ein Film erzählen, aber sie mag etwas Ungewöhnlicheres tun, sie kann den Betrachter dazu inspirieren, ein Geschichtenerzähler zu werden.

“TRY ME!”

Eine Geschichte” fährt Kb fort und rückt in professoraler Weise sein Brille zurecht, “benötigt eine Abfolge von Geschehen; einen Anfang oder Einleitung, einen Mittelteil und ein Ende. Aristoteles hat bereits vor langer Zeit beobachtet, dass eine Geschichte aus einer Einleitung gefolgt von einer Ausführung, die er Peripetaia nannte, und einem Ende, die Katharsis, besteht. Es geht also um Abläufe, um Zeit. Eine Foto friert jedoch die Zeit ein. Da gibt es keinen Ablauf und deswegen keine Geschichte.”
Selma protestiert: “Wenn ich jedoch Dinas Seehundphotos betrachte, stelle ich mir vor, woher der Seehund kam und wohin er wohl schwimmen wird.””
Klar doch“, antwortet Kb triumphierend, “du stellst dir eine Geschichte vor. Die Fotografie erzählt dir garnichts. Du kannst dir auch eine Geschichte vorstellen, wenn du auf eine Kartoffel starrst.”

Siri turned to the fungus in search of a narrative.

Und so blieb diese Debatte in unserem Haus ungelöst. Dina glaubt immer noch, dass ein einzelnes Bild unausgesprochene Geschichten enthält. Kb besteht darauf, dass es ohne einen Zeitablauf keine Geschichte geben kann. Selma findet echte emotionale Bedeutung in verschwommenen Fotos von Pilzen. Und Siri hat begonnen, dramatische Portraits von Gemüse aufzunehmen – nur um jeden zu verwirren.
Und wir nehmen an, dass die Wahrheit wie immer irgendwie in der Mitte liegt. Eine Fotografie mag zwar keine Geschichte wie ein Roman oder ein Film zu erzählen, aber macht etwas Ungewöhnlicheres: sie lädt den Betrachter dazu ein, ein Erzähler zu werden.

Mit lieben Grüßen vom kleinen Dorf am großen Meer

151 thoughts

    • Dear John

      In the end it’s a question of what you understand what ‘telling a story’ means.

      David Hockney thought a lot about this question of time and narrative in photography.

      Thank you very much
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Liked by 2 people

  1. Every photo here – yes, even the fungi – suggests a story. Your story might not be the same as my story, but that doesn’t diminish either of our thoughts on the matter. Photos are often a catalyst to our imagination. An intriguing post, and as ever, beautifully illustrated.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Thank you very much, dear Margaret 🙏 🙏
      Well, to tell a story is different from to make you imagine one, is Kb’s argument. We can see that.
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  2. A photograph do tell a story indeed and while a painting tell the story you see in it I feel instead photographs tell you the story whoever takes them see and want to tell, they tend to tell reality as it is.

    Liked by 2 people

  3. I have spent way too much time on this very topic, stopping short of sentience in all life forms–but not too far short! The winning line in this post (and one of the tidbits I love finding in your pieces) is “always dangerous when philosophy is already underway.”

    Liked by 2 people

    • We agree, dear Audrey. Even the written or told stories are created in the minds of the receivers. Nevertheless there is an original story that you don’t have in pictures. There is an imagined story only.
      Thank you
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Thank you for this fun and philosophical read, KB! Dina is an excellent photographer and I’m afraid I’d have to lean towards the photos telling stories- no matter the interpretation by the viewer. 😊 📸

    Liked by 2 people

    • Dear Terry
      I am not arguing that photos don’t inspire us to imagine stories but there can’t be an original story because the lack of a timeline.
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Like

  5. Another FAB posting today! As a man, I tend to agree with Kb that a photo doesn’t tell a story. Then I look at old photos of my Mother and my Gran and I put my hand on my heart and I write the gaps in my memories and time with my own stories.

    Special photos; I just love the hares and since I’ve not seen one for many years, I’m really sad now. Is that the beginning of a story I’ll never publish?

    Liked by 2 people

    • Hi Marie
      That’s maybe a question of language, does it contain or does it trigger an inspiration.
      I think a photo triggers the inspiration to tell yourself a story but the story doesn’t contain in the photo but in the onlooker.
      Thanks
      Kb 🙂

      Like

  6. How wonderful KB and Dina! As a photographer, I believe every landscape and any created thing has a story to tell. The image sparks the creativity … or does creativity spark the photo? Me waxing philosophical.

    Fabulous photos and philosophical diacussion! And those darn mushrooms spark hunger 😋

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Several images on a thread with a connecting chain of events become the real story, the intentional one. The story of the solitary image is with each of us, perhaps not in accordance with that of the image creator.

    Liked by 2 people

    • We absolutely agree, dear Hans. Several photos, like in film, tell a story because there a timeline.
      Thank you
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Like

    • Dear Richard

      There is no doubt that photos are always manipulative. They are two-dimensional but often let us imagine a three-dimensional reality. I think generally they can only set free what’s in the receiver.

      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Liked by 3 people

  8. As always, beautiful photos, and interesting words. I enjoyed the debate! My conclusion is that a photo can inspire a story. That story will be a different one for everyone looking at the photo, so the story will be told in many ways.

    Love from a damp Beetley, Pete. X

    Liked by 2 people

    • Dear Pete

      Yes, as the story is inspired but lies in the receiver, therefore, there are so many different stories that can be triggered. In a way, so many stories as there are onlookers of a photo.

      Enjoy the sunshine 🌞
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  9. Wieder so herrlich zu lesen von euch und euren so Herz erfrischenden Debatten, lieber Klausbernd und kam dabei aus dem Schmunzeln nicht mehr raus!😊
    Nach meinem Empfinden sprechen diese so schönen und interessanten Fotografien hier, aber jedes für sich selbst, richtig schöne Geschichten und das zudem für jeden einzelnen Betrachter seine ganz eigene.

    Ganz liebe Grüße ins kleine Dorf am großen Meer und Danke für dieses wieder so schöne “Lebenszeichen” hier von euch. 🤗🍀⚘️

    Liked by 2 people

    • Danke, liebe Hanne, für diesen lieben Kommentar 🙏 🙏

      Huch, das sind wirklich echte, teilweise furios ausgeführte Streitigkeiten bei uns. Naja, solange es nur darum geht, können wir doch froh sein. Gäbe es die nicht, wäre es uns wohl zu langweilig. Da treffen natürlich die bilderschaffenden Dina und Selma und die textschaffenden Kb und Siri aufeinander. Irgendwie sind Text und Bild wohl unterschiedlichere Welten als es erst einmal scheint. Und hier wollen wir nun beide zusammenbringen, was nicht ohne Reibereien geht.

      Ganz liebe Grüße nach Deutschland und ein wunderbares Wochenende
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  10. Dear friends, another delightful debate in your kitchen!
    I tend to agree with you all and yes, I have read Hockney’s views on photography.
    Love the hare photos, the edit and the expressions. Well done for the combination of an inspiring read and fantastic photos, Fab Four!

    Perhaps the most interesting question, something several commenters have mentioned already –
    a photograph does not tell one story. It creates a meeting point between: the photographer’s intention, the subject itself and the viewer’s memories and emotions.
    It’s the innate human tendency to view the world through a human lens, often interpreting animal actions as having human-like intent.

    In the end, this tension is part of what makes photography endlessly fascinating as an art form. Often the best storytelling photographs leave room for silence.

    Kram

    Annalena xx

    Like

    • Dear Annalena

      The thing is, the stories that the photograph evokes do not lie in the photograph itself, but in the different viewers. That is why so many different stories are possible. Indeed, the story that the picture triggers is depending on the photographer’s intention, the expectation of onlooker and the situation, in which the picture is seen.
      We agree as well that we project on pictures of animals usually human traits.

      Well, you end in a way with Wittgenstein’s last sentence of his Tractatus Logicus “Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent.” He refers to this especially in relation to aesthetics. Is this clever or the easy way out?

      With love
      xxxx
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

    • Hi Solaner

      We followed your link. What we imagine when we look at your photo is our story. The photo is merely a trigger.

      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Like

  11. It just might be that you and Dina are both correct Klausbernd 😁 To some a photograph can tell a story and to others it can make them think of what might have been. Wonderful photos.

    Liked by 2 people

  12. I love your debates – they make me think. And that is a good thing. I also love Hanne’s photos, she is so talented it is a joy when I see one of your posts appear because I know I will love them. As for photos, they do indeed capture a moment in time, but they also invite us to make up our own story.

    And Siri, naturally, has begun taking dramatic portraits of vegetables just to confuse everybody.

    And bless Siri – have to love the bookfayries too

    Liked by 1 person

    • You are absolutely right, Jude. Siri’s dramatic portraits of vegetables is a topic of its own. Yesterday morning we found a note on the small vegetable table “art in progress, please let it rot away”

      I wonder what she’ll pick at the famers market this weekend. 😁

      Liked by 1 person

    • Dear Jude

      We need such debates as food. They keep us lively and young. Siri and Selma are always discussing. They explained that this is the Bookfayries’ way of life.

      With love
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Like

  13. I’m with Dini on this one. Some of our WP colleagues will post a single image and invite others to write a story around it. The image is the genesis… The rest is up to the author/storyteller! 😎 🇳🇴

    Liked by 2 people

  14. Excellent debates. As one of my philosopy teachers once said: you -probably- agree differently. KB is right about the sequence. The photograph “catches” only one moment. It can be the “opening” sentence, the story thread, or “la chute”, the finale.

    As for potatoes, there were a couple of potatoes in Toy Story, weren’t they?

    Thanks for the reflection and smile.

    Liked by 2 people

  15. Of course every picture tells a story . . . But each story varies from person to person as to how their inner self processes what they see . . . oh, that first hare simply had a headache and was trying to make himself more comfortable . . .

    Liked by 2 people

  16. Naturally a picture can tell a story, but a different one from each person who looks, as each sees what is there in a different manner . . . oh, that poor bunny simply had a headache and was atempting to get away from the light . . . 🙂 !

    Liked by 2 people

    • A picture triggers so many different stories as there are receivers.
      If the picture would tell the story there wouldn’t be so many different stories.

      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Like

  17. Bei euch geht es ja fast so philostreitbar zu wie bei uns! Schönes Leben so …
    Ob Bilder sich da wirklich von Texten so sehr unterscheiden? Ist denn so selbstverständlich, dass nicht auch ein Text in der Leserin eine Geschichte induziert, die individuell leicht von der “objektiven” literarischen Vorlage abweicht? Fügen wir betrachtend/lesend/hörend nicht jedem Kunstwerk eine Ebene hinzu? Sie kann aber nur entstehen, wenn das Kunstwerk bereits einen Kern enthält, an dem die Assoziation kondensieren kann. Und da gibt es in meinem Verständnis Fotos, die einen dynamischen Kern enthalten, der ein Zeitelektron schon enthält, das um ihn kreist. Und sei es nur eine Ultrakurzgeschichte.
    Der Tag des Metaphernhoppings scheint das heute bei mir zu werden.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Hi Ule

      das sehen wir auch, dass jeder Text letztendlich so viele Lesarten wie Leser hat. Aber er gibt eine Richtung vor, er leitet die Fantasie des Lesers. Ein Foto wirkt ähnlich, es gibt einen Impuls, aber die Geschichte muss der Betrachter entwickeln. Deswegen sind mehr Geschichten möglich.

      Danke 🙏🙏

      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

    • Der Clou bei den schwarzen Zeichen, den Buchstaben, ist deren Kombinatorik. Letztendlich sind die Buchstaben eine Abstraktion von Piktogrammen, also von Bildern. So gesehen stellen die Buchstaben eines Wortes eine Bildergeschichte dar, die Abstraktion einer Bildergeschichte. Auch hier zeigt sich, viele Bilder können eine Geschichte erzählen, aber nicht ein einzelnes Bild.

      Liked by 1 person

  18. Oh, I do enjoy reading your posts! And Dina’s photography is simply stunning. I think it all depends on the image…. some images, like that hare lying down, can imply a story at a glance, but that will be a different story for each observer, while inanimate objects alone are less likely to evoke an emotional response.

    Wishing you all some warm and sunny spring days!

    Liked by 1 person

    • Thank you very much for your comment, dear Cathy.

      An image allows the viewer more freedom to come up with their own story. A narrative leaves less room for this, as it dictates the story.

      We wish you a happy weekend
      The Fab Four of CLey
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  19. Wie schön von euch in Cley zu hören und sich einige Gedanken zu euren Fragen und Dinas tollen Bilder zu machen! Ich kann mir gut vorstellen von gewissen Fotos, die mich berühren, eine kleine Geschichte zu schreiben und von leblosen, statischen Fotos eher nicht! Alles Gute und cari saluti Martina

    Liked by 1 person

    • Auch schön, wieder von dir zu lesen, liebe Martina. Habe Dank für deinen Kommentar.
      Ganz liebe Grüße von der sonnigen, aber noch kühlen Küste
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  20. A picture can tell stories and everyone has a different imagination and thinks of something else. That is the beauty of it. The pictures from Hanne are stunning and can really start a conversation. I love that tired hare, he obvoiusly had a heavy night. 🙂

    Best wishes Ute ♥

    Liked by 1 person

    • Dear Ute

      Thanks for commenting 🙏 🙏
      Dina just went out to find some hare to photograph. I stay at home cutting the lawn.

      Have a great weekend
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  21. A deer grazing quietly in the meadow tells one story, a deer facing a specific direction on full alert tells something else, a deer caught in mid-leap tells something else. When I saw deer leaping in a particular way on my Oregon property, I went looking for the cougar. Even a single deer track has a tale to tell. So I’m with Siri.

    Liked by 2 people

  22. I LOVED this post!!! What a wonderful conversation. Thoughtful, philosophical, and delightfully funny at the same time. I felt I was in the room with you. I agree Klausbernd that a photograph does not tell a story in the structured narrative sense of beginning, middle, and end. But Dina and Selma are equally right that photographs awaken something narrative within us. The moment we look at an image, we instinctively begin searching for context, emotion, memory, and meaning. I think that may be why certain photographs stay with us for years. They become attached to our own inner stories. A single image can remind us of loss, joy, longing, loneliness, beauty, or even an entire season of life.

    I’m with Siri! Her idea is brilliant!!! That photographs are perhaps closer to poetry than novels. They suggest rather than explain. They leave room for the viewer to enter the frame imaginatively. Also, I completely believe a potato can possess narrative depth under the right artistic conditions. Sending much love and many hugs to our dear friends The Fab Four of Cley.

    P.S. I have just started a book, “The Science of Storytelling – why stories make us human and how to tell them better by Will Storr. One of his central ideas is that stories are not simply entertainment. They are how humans make sense of chaos. The brain is constantly trying to create meaning, predict outcomes, understand motives, and locate identity within a larger framework. In many ways, we do not merely consume stories — we live inside them. Anyway – I’ll let you know my thoughts once I have read it!

    Liked by 2 people

    • Dear Rebecca

      Actually, we are telling ourselves stories all the time. To tell a story means to make sense. We are looking forward to what you’ll write about the about storytelling. I had a strange experience. When I was in Marrakesh for a fortnight, I was fascinated by the storytellers, although I don’t understand the flowing Arabic language. The telling was fascinating without understanding.,

      Siri is a clever Bookfairy, isn’t she?
      And as more often than we think, all sides are right from their point of view. That makes an argument interesting and multidimensional.

      With lots of love 🥰😘😍<3
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      P.S.
      We can’t comment on your posts. WordPress doesn’t give us the form for commenting.

      Liked by 1 person

    • I always enjoy your discussions, Klausbernd because everyone brings a slightly different perspective, and somehow the conversation becomes richer because of it. I think that is one of the great joys of storytelling and art in general. We begin to see through another person’s eyes for a little while. I found your experience in Marrakesh fascinating. And yes, Siri is indeed a very clever Bookfairy. I loved her thought that photographs awaken stories rather than simply tell them. That idea will stay with me in the coming days. We’ve just returned from a 3 week travel break. During that time, I had closed comments temporarily. They should be open in the next posts. With much love going back to my dear friends, The Fab Four of Cley.

      Liked by 1 person

    • Dear Rebecca
      To see other perspectives as your own is very important. To be one-dimensional is deadly.
      By the way, I made my oral examination in philosophy about Marcuse’s “The One-Dimensional Man”.
      With love from the other side of our planet
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

    • Oh Klausbernd – you always give me something to think about. Thanks for the introduction to this book/philosophy. After I read your comment, I did a little research into the book and am absolutely fascinated. Marcuse raises questions that seem even more relevant today than they did in the 1960s. I have already begun a small exploratory journey into his ideas, particularly his thoughts about consumer culture, technology, distraction, and the danger of losing the ability to think beyond the systems surrounding us. What struck me most was his concern that people can become absorbed into comfort and constant stimulation without realizing what may quietly be disappearing: contemplation, imagination, inwardness, and the capacity to question. My recent blog break was a time that I gave a considerable amount of thought to exactly these ideas. So it is serendipitous that you brought up this book/Marcuse. Many thanks.

      Liked by 1 person

  23. Let me start by saying: Siri is my hero, and Dina, of course, because of the beautiful stories she captures with her camera 😊. Art speaks to people in so many different ways (painting, sculpture, mathematics, etc.). Photography is one medium I think holds a bit more reality than others, thus may not tell a story as a novel or film can tell, but that is the beauty of a great image (versus a snapshot image). You’ve written so well, why this is the case: storytelling lies less in action and more in atmosphere. Dina’s beautiful shots are exhibit A through Z, Klausbernd… and I rest my case 😇❤️.

    As for the potato comment, you do remember the banana duct-taped to a wall that sold for millions… 🙃 And then Siri comes to the rescue again: “photographs are like poetry. They don’t tell stories directly — they awaken them…” With the final, beautifully seductive shot of the red umbrella, making it so! 🌷 Great post, and a debate that is always fun to ponder. Cheers to the Fab Four of Cley for getting me thinking on this beautiful Sunday morning.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Good morning, dear Randall

      Thank you very much for your kind comment 🙏 🙏
      Siri is a clever Fayrie, well, a Bookfayrie, isn’t she? Kb and Dina are very proud of her, but Selma is clever too, more practically clever.

      It’s a great comparison if Siri says photography is like poetry. Poetry and photographs set something free in ourselves, often something we didn’t know about before. It’s a kind of unconscious knowledge. It’s like psychoanalysis, which wants to make the unconscious conscious, as Freud explained it. C.G. Jung worked with pictures in his therapies using the associations that the pictures set free.

      The last picture of Kb with the red umbrella is an iconographic quote of Saul Leiter’s famous picture “Red Umbrella” from 1958.

      To get the visitors of our blog thinking is our aim. Great if we achieved this.

      Happy Sunday
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Like

    • Well, telling a story is different from inspiring the onlooker to imagine one. But anyway, that’s only a linguistic problem.

      Thank you for commenting
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂 

      Liked by 1 person

  24. Oh je 😜 Sorry Klausbernd, I agree with Dina and Siri 💯

    Your post triggered me so much that I still have a big smirk on my face. I can imagine the four of you in the kitchen discussing. My imagination is now running away with me every time I look closely at a picture.

    Fantastic blog 🙏🫶😜

    Liked by 2 people

  25. Dear friends,

    This is such a delightful clever and fun post, I’m giggling all the way through whilst admiring not only the clever juxtaposition of interpretations.

    You make it sound so homely and lively, I feel almost homesick for Cley, lol. Thank you so much for introducing a new way of looking at vegetables.

    What are you planning for your BB (big birthday) this year, Kb? Would you all like to visit me in Svalbard for my BB?

    Talk soon.

    Klem
    Per Magnus xx

    Liked by 1 person

    • Our dear friend

      Svalbard in winter sounds great for me, but Siri and Selma find it boring sitting most of the time inside. Actually, we plan to go to Istanbul for a couple of days and then by ship down the coast of Turkey and Greece. We haven’t decided yet, another option is Uzbekistan (silk road).

      Thanks a lot for your kind comment. We tried to make the text as lively as we could.

      Wishing you a great time at home in the High Arctic
      Lots of love
      KLEM 🤗 🤗
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Like

  26. Nicely done. Telling a story about story telling within the story. I agree with both of you: a story can stand on its own, as well as a single photograph. However, we seem to be in the business of melding both to tell a better story. That’s why we keep up with the craft. I’m looking forward to seeing where the discussion goes next.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Thank you very much, dear Brad.

      One picture can’t tell a story as it freezes time, but it can make you imagine a story. Two are more pictures can easily tell stories.

      We like those discussions.
      Thank you
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  27. From one photographer to another, I believe a photo tells the story, but it also can depend on the subject. For example, a candid photo definitely tells its own story without words. Then I’ve heard arguments that it depends on how the photographer wanted to portray the subject and how the photo has been “manipulated” by the photographer to tell a different story.

    Have you noticed that these days, if you enter a photography competition, the photo/s always needs a story behind the entry? When did this happen? A photo is art, and art is subjective, so why can’t each viewer have their own thoughts about what they’re seeing, story or no story?

    Like

    • Hi Nilla

      A photograph can’t tell a story because it’s frozen time. A story needs a timeline. Without a timeline, no story. But a photo can trigger storytelling in the receiver. The story is dependent on the receiver, therefore it’s subjective.

      For a competition, the photo must trigger a story in the judges. The story and style must fit into the media where it should be published. Dina publishes regularly photographs in papers and magazines and takes part in competitions. Actually, competitions don’t say much about the quality of a photo, it matters where it gets published.

      Thanks and cheers
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

    • Hi Klausbernd

      Interesting discussion and points of view.
      So you don’t agree with “A picture is worth a thousand words”?
      I’ve also read this about Leonardo da Vinci who wrote that “a poet would be overcome by sleep and hunger before [being able to] describe with words what a painter is able to [depict] in an instant.”

      For a photo competition these days, the photo is also judged on the acommpaning words (story). If the photo is strong enough, it shouldn’t need a story.

      As you and others here have said here, the receiver perceives their own story from an image. Where I agree with you is still life photos. not much o0f a story happening there… 😉

      Dina’s photos are fabulous! Does Dina write stories to accompany her photos in a competition?

      Cheers
      Nilla

      Liked by 1 person

    • Hi Nilla

      That’s not the point. Of course, a picture can trigger lots of stories. A picture can’t tell a story, but can make the onlooker a storyteller. That’s pure logic.

      Dina had her photos published by the BBC, The Times, The Guardian and other national papers and magazines. It was always without an accompanying story. She also won many photo competitions without a story accompanying her pictures.

      Writing a story to accompany your pictures shows that a picture on its own doesn’t tell the story. But we have never heard about this. Which competitions want a picture with a text?

      Cheers
      The Fab Four of Cley

      Like

  28. Well Fab Four, I’ll admit it’s been too long since my last visit but I am so happy to have stopped by for this one. Your “discussion” is most interesting and I will admit I agree with you both. The question is one of definition and/or intention. I happen to agree with both of you … is that too “wimpy” ?! As always you’ve offered wonderful food for thought. As always Dina’s work is extraordinary and I loved every image. Your furry subjects are quite different than our varieties here so that was especially interesting, and I loved what seemed to be true affection in the opening image. Beautifully done from start to finish.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Dear Tina
      We agree with you, both sides are right. Well, it depends on how important you take semantics. If you say or write that a picture tells a story, this is wrong, seen it linguisticly. But if you’re not too strict about the wording, you can let it slide, as many readers will probably substitute ‘telling’ with ‘inspiring’ (unconsciously). My editor, however, would cross it out with a thick red line.
      Thank you very much for liking Dina’s photography. Indeed, Dina loves her hares. She is a hare whisperer.
      Thank you very much for your kind words, we very much appreciate
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Like

    • Hi Suzanne

      I answered the question just above in the answer to Tina.
      Of course, a picture can’t tell a story because there is no timeline that’s necessary for a story.

      Thanks for commenting
      The Fab Four of Cley
      🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂

      Like

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