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Alfred Horsley Hinton

All Quotes by Alfred Horsley Hinton

“…the strongest part of a picture is the sensation and the feeling which it creates, this being done through the agency of certain familiar objects more or less accurately depicted and represented with more or less completeness.The MOTIVE, then, in all pictorial work is to convey some thought or idea or sensation by means of a chosen subject.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“…we might now formulate a maxim to the effect that art -- that is, in our case, pictorial representation --- employs the image of concrete things to create abstract ideas.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“In selecting our subject…there are two factors which it should be borne in mind are essential, and these are Expression and Composition”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“…--- a view may include any number of interesting facts, may constitute a whole catalog of important and pretty items, and so be valuable as a view or as a record; but it would utterly fails as a pictorial composition.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“The composition may be ever so carefully worked out, but it must appear unconsciously done. And so it will be best in most cases to depart slightly from precise and symmetrical arrangement, as though unintentionally, lest the endeavor to obey artificial rules betrays itself.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“The desire to see for the sake of seeing is with most people the only desire to be gratified; hence the delight in detail.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“Hence SELECTION in photography, or at least in landscape and some other branches of work, often takes the place of what in painting becomes voluntary COMPOSITION.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“If we are to select our subjects or arrange our groups with a pictorial motive we must absolutely and entirely sacrifice every other consideration, and be prepared to cut out of our composition the prettiest and most interesting item, if by so doing composition pure and simple is improved. And if some subject you are attached to will not admit of composition or will not admit of your treating it pictorially, then photograph it if you wish, but never suppose that it will form a picture.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“The prettiest or most interesting prospect may lack the conditions which awaken our emotions, and, lacking the essentials of the picture, must be passed by.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“… to put it into slightly different form, it is not the facts in nature that the good picture aims at portraying, but the effects of light and shade accompanied by a pleasing arrangement.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“Photography itself may err by inaccurately rendering the relative tones in Nature. Then we shall have to ask, What is " Tone "?...”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“...he (a photographer) forgets that unless he has learnt when the tones of a picture are right or not, he will not know whether his work is good or bad, nor know what to try and overcome in future.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“Very great care should then be taken to see that distant objects are rendered so as to appear distant that is, in correct relative tone when compared with the foreground or nearer portions.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“It must be remembered that after all in making a picture we are endeavoring to set down on one plane various objects in such a way as to suggest an infinitude of varying planes, and hence we are justified in selecting such conditions of nature as shall help us to give the impression of truthfulness, even though it be not in particular cases absolutely true to fact.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“...strictly speaking, tone is the relative lightness and darkness due to the effect of light governed by atmosphere, and has nothing to do with the relative lightness and darkness or relative value with which various colours appear when compared with each other.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“With most of us, even without special training, there is a certain instinctive sense of proportion, and thus we recognize the relative distance of objects by their relative size.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“We know the mountain peaks are lofty, and we think of them so, and we mentally enlarge them, but not the cottage at their foot, or the trees half way up.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“As a rule, in pictorial photography a long-focus lens will on the whole be most satisfactory.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“The chief characteristic of the pin-hole photograph is that we get a general suppression of focus in all parts the picture is nowhere quite sharp.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“But the quality of the result obtained by using a pin-hole to which its advocates attach most importance is the suppression of sharp focus over the whole image, no one plane being more sharply focused than another.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“The objection to the shiny, highly polished surface of albumen and gelatine papers is that, besides the fact that the surface reflects false and disturbing lights, the very polish and gloss has an artificial appearance which, from its very superfine character, irresistibly reminds us of its origin and nature.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“Probably every photographer has at times found it convenient to print one part of a negative more than another or lias covered another portion during printing, thus deliberately making those portions lighter or darker, as the case may be.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“He (the photographer) has practically created a new thing out of materials gathered from nature; upon a foundation of fact he has allowed his imagination to build up an entirely fictitious scene, and the truth of the effect will depend upon how far his perceptions have been trained by studying nature at various times, so as to know how things might look under certain circumstances.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“In such a picture the artist may depart from actual fact, from what actually was, so long as he does not exceed what might have been.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“...let it be remembered that as photography is our chosen medium, then if photography unaided will give us the effect we want there is no especial virtue in altering it.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“There is a difference in printing greater depth to any portion with the negative and shading down without the negative. In the former case we get a deeper and stronger image, still preserving to a great extent the relative contrasts between the lights and shades in that portion. This is not always what we require. In order to concentrate attention upon that is, to emphasize, some particular spot, it may be desirable to shade down and flatten some portion.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“Both with the negative in position and subsequently without it, every part of a large print is, maybe, thus printed in, piece by piece, a large print often occupying me two or three days.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“The texture of the printed image is of such peculiar character that neither brush or liquid paint seem capable of imitating it.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“The moment the eye perceives that the picture is produced by other than the professed means, the effect, the appeal to the imagination, is disturbed.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“Art seeks ever to conceal the means by which its effects are produced and the method in which the work is wrought.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“...skies and clouds were still regarded as something quite apart from the rest of the picture, and, indeed, are still so regarded by the less advanced.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“The sky is as much an essential part of the picture as any other part of it, and indeed, in very many instances, constitutes the key-note and important feature of the whole idea.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“A little thought, however, will show that both aerial and linear perspective play as important a part in the heavens as on the earth beneath.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“As a general rule, therefore, the lights and shadows of clouds near the horizon are less vivid than in clouds higher up. Exceptions to this rough rule will be found when the source of light is near the horizon, as in sunset and sunrise, also when there is a gathering of local stormclouds which may hover over the distance as a dark pall, when there is fair weather and light, transparent clouds near to us.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“In rave cases, if the sun be behind the observer, the distant land may catch a powerful ray of sunlight, whilst the clouds overhanging it may remain in shadow, and hence light buildings, yellow cornfields, etc., may appear lighter than the distant clouds, but they at the same time gain in an appearance of nearness.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“This is another matter that will need careful study, because the earth, having only one chief source of light, it follows that if clouds be printed into a landscape, both must show evidence of being lighted from the same direction.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“… nature often produces combinations and effects which on paper appear incorrect.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“It should be a point for careful consideration, then, that with due consideration for perspective, lighting, etc., those clouds should be chosen for a landscape which, together with the landscape, will make a well-composed, well-balanced, and symmetrical whole.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“It must not be supposed that it is always necessary to present our landscapes with an attractive and well-defined arrangement of clouds; on the contrary, it will often happen that the effect of a scene is best emphasized by a mere grey tint representing a covered sky or even a blue, cloudless sky; but this is a very different thing to rendering it as a white blank.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“A good negative is one thing, but a negative that will enable us to get a good picture is another.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“… generally speaking, a thin negative, one with a minimum of contrast and density, yet with just sufficient to give the amount of contrast required in the print, should be aimed at; but it must possess very soft gradation throughout.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“Size, the mere number of square inches, of a picture, counts for nothing. A small picture may be quite as satisfying as a large; for remember that, as compared with the size of the mountain itself, the difference between a picture of it, thirty inches long, and one of six inches, is less than trifling.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“The practice of Pictorial Photography cannot be taught by a Kindergarten system; the mere comparison with typical examples must be accompanied with a right understanding of underlying principles and theory.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“I have sometimes felt that writers on the artistic aspect of photography have too often, like the reformers of religious creeds, led their followers into a condition of disbelief and unrest, and then left them to find out for themselves how to live up to new and vague beliefs, so many writers on Pictorial Photography have told us what to avoid without saying why, and have then told us what to do without showing how.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“… what the photographer has to be urged, persuaded and argued with, to do, are often matters which the artist never needs to think about, because it would be unnatural to him not to act in unconscious obedience thereto.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“...to be able to say of a representation that it is "exactly like Nature " is by no means equivalent to saying that it is a fine picture.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“It must ever be borne in mind that the prime object of all fine arts is to please through some or other of the emotions which it stirs.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“… especially considering that the whole matter of applying photography to purely artistic ends is in such a state of infancy, and that this idea of deliberate violation of truth to fact, for the sake of securing truth to ideas, has hardly yet been put into practice.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“The different degree of light interference between blue and red also affords a power which we may be glad to avail ourselves, in some cases using the red where a very marked degree of lightening is desired, or blue where only a trifling difference is needed.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“… it may suggest whether a negative made by camera and lens is always an essential, or indeed if a negative at all is needed so long as we can produce a light-painted image at our will.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“Justification must be sought in the fact that "no very great incongruity is observable."”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“A picture whether or not it is really true to fact must above all things appear true.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“...the purpose of a picture is not veracity to fact so much as truthfulness to idea; that is to say, it is not a question of what eye sees nor even what the brain imagines, but it is a question of what kind of production best awakens in the mind of the beholder the ideas which the maker of the picture desires him to receive.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“The utmost care and forethought, and no little manipulative skill, are necessary to control the defining power of the lens or detail printing power of a sharply focused negative.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“...but record and recognition are not pictorial qualities.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“It is the subjects which might be imitated by pieces of paper of varying depth of color laid one over the other, which are the subjects that will give more readily the greater satisfaction.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton
“In selecting our subject then we have two things to consider. First, is it as good as the conditions will let it be - that is, have we chosen the point of view which, with the present conditions, shows at its best pictorially, and secondly, if taken from this point now, are the alterations we would like, weather or light, to make for us of such a kind that we can introduce them for ourselves when printing, and, if so, what are those alterations.”
— Alfred Horsley Hinton