Photography internalizes some of the most interesting ontological
issues regarding art. The question "Is it art?" haunted photographers
throughout its history. Its inability to find alternatives to
depiction complicated its entry into the modernist discourse when the
other arts were engaged with abstraction. Photography's impulse to
depict in its most utilitarian tendencies (for example
photo-journalism as art) creates, to use the artist Jeff Wall's words,
the "most problematic kind of photograph" which anchored itself
through social validity. This to me is an insufficient condition for
art. In response to these concerns I had over photography as an art
form, I made a series of works that investigated the terms and
conditions within which photography defined itself, the first of which
is titled "Ode to the Pictorialists". Pictorialist photography in
late 19c and early 20c referenced paintings in its composition,
subject matter and its painterly surface which called for the creative
manipulation of the image. When the normative practice of
art-photography was established through modernism, this tradition was
marginalized only to resurface with a vengeance in the digital era.