AI

AI is Depressing by jim lehmann

Lately….well….a few months…..I have been seeing an increasing number of AI images crop up on various spots, including ‘in-house’ local clubs etc. This is depressing. Let’s not confuse things here; AI isn’t photography but it is a form of visual representation. But AI is making it’s way into the mainstream and many will equate to an actual photograph. Or for that matter…..AI is becoming Video and AI is becoming paintings and any form of visual representation.

While technology itself isn’t depressing, for me…..what disturbs me is that the populace thinks of AI as a true photograph. They look at an AI painting and feel it is true human hands that made it. They look at a video or movie and feel that the person on the screen is a real person and that an actual human director is directing. This is depressing.

When will AI be coupled with 3D and begin to produce AI created sculptures? When will AI be able to create ‘any’ artistic arm? Soon…..all too soon. And the vast populace who barely hang on with mental acuity as it is will accept this technology as that created by human endeavors and hands and eyes. This is sad.

This almost makes me stop with my photography and take a break. Will AI make me leave photography all-told? It might….. It might also make the painter quit painting and those who work with clay or bronze or just about any medium. AI hits at something that is intangible as it strikes away at what makes us human. Inside….really inside of me, I know I created this photograph. It should just stop there and as the artist, I should be content with my work as I created it. And I am….. but increasingly as other forces come into existence, what those do and what the populace views them as, will chip away at who I am as an artist. That is sad. That is depressing.

For now…..I continue. I load up my film and off I am. But I do notice I am not as avid in my pursuit. I leave you with two from yesterday, shot on my Olympus OM2sp plus 400 Fomapan.

Stepping Back into ‘My’ Time by jim lehmann

I find myself stepping back…. looking for ways to take my personal life and shift backwards into a time less tech dependent…… . But hey, here I am on the computer, blogging….so I haven’t quite achieved nirvana, quite yet.

Although this process from getting to A to Z is a bit easier to do since I retired from a long career in education. Yikes, no more zoom meetings to attend, or relentless software updates ….nor emails to read and a ‘to-do’ list full of work related substances. It is gone man, and a huge portion of that was tech crap. With life in general, I feel humans have overstepped boundaries marking a clear delineation between what is technology and what is human. And the scary thing is that I perceive of this ‘now’…which is AI and Social Media in still its infancy.

So I have decided to return to a time in which my comfort zone resides in… I was just talking with my nephew and we were chatting about circa 1970-90’s…. an era in when I feel humanity was at a pretty top end of things in terms of creature comfort and knowledge yet little technology as we know of it today. But during that relatively brief era, a combination of technology and the social media which accompanied, has brought an era of increasing dismay and surely skepticism.

So my quest has been a return to a time now unknown to many and forgotten by an equal number. …that of a more analog world. For instance in my situation, there was a time I was over-reliant upon You Tube and it became addictive. And in our camera world, where the technology and ease of camera plus lens made it relatively easy to be void of both fun and creativity to arrive at capturing shots. I speak of extreme ISO’s or AF or more or less just ‘press and snap’ to take images in the camera world and to call yourself a photographer.

Don’t misunderstand me as I arrived at this conclusion based upon my thoughts, or my problem and I couldn’t care less about your stance. Go ahead and embed a chip in your brain or invest $20,000 in Leica cameras + lens. Shoot proudly with that red dot. Or take your newest Fuji 100 (whatever alphabet we are on now to designate model) and shoot it too. Use memory cards or no, better yet, Wi-fi your images to your phone or upload to the cloud. Again, not for me. Likewise, share my images with the world and be in constant anticipation of someone ‘liking’ your image with a thumbs up. It becomes all about social media and not the photography. Or if you elect, become a prisoner to social media and constantly worry about a You Tube Channel or Instagram or whatever senseless social media platform comes into existence, for they will always be there, friendless changing.

For…. I will continue to chip away at that hype and inhuman existence and strive for ‘none of the above’. I purposely elect to shoot with analog cameras and I take control by developing my own film. I even use caffenol where I can, as evident by what is in my refrigerator now cooling down and in the image I provided below. I even choose to enlarge my 35mm film negatives and create alternative printing from them. Some may label it as imperfect or lacking mainstream, but hey, so what? I might even hesitate to take the ancient medium of colored pencils and begin to shade in color into my BW images. Shame on me.

All of that forces me to pull back. I view the world of 1970’s—1980’s and say, okay…where can I bring today back into yesterday….It is possible but not always doable. For instance in with my camera hobby, I am not 100% analog for I obviously haven’t achieved pure analog (IE: this blog / Squarespace or DP Review). While I scan my film negatives I enlarge them from 35mm to 6” x 9” or there about and I do it using Pixelmator which is an old Apple app. I like to physically view my images and hold them in my hands so by enlarging this allows me to use alternative printing to showcase my art. If I decide to create a zine, I send them off to Mixam for printing.

So no, not 100% analog but a few baby steps toward. The end result of my imperfect masterpieces created using alternative processes fits my need for now. I have become more comfortable in my own analog skin and less reliant on digital. Perhaps I will find a need for a complete dark room set-up but no need to rush. My current studio works. But this analog process is one that slows me down and allows me to reflect. I am more at peace, less stressed, less reliant upon digital and less need to be perfect, in my imperfect world regarding results. I have taken a step back in my time. Below is a shot of my caffenol percolating in the refrigerator so I can develop a few rolls I took the other week.