There is a peculiar cult operating inside photography. You have seen them: the Autofocus Clergy.
The laboratory monks of corner sharpness and focus-acquisition speed. Men refreshing firmware notes with the anticipation of Renaissance astronomers awaiting celestial revelation. They speak of subject detection as if divine intervention had finally solved photography's ancient tragedy: the terrifying possibility of missing something.
According to this increasingly loud theology, photography before modern autofocus systems was little more than organized suffering. A problem with this theory is that the entire history of documentary and author-driven photography stubbornly refuses to cooperate.
Photography did not emerge from technical perfection. It emerged from friction, from hesitation, from failure, and often from cameras that today's specification warriors would reject faster than a soft corner at f/1.2.
Take Helen Levitt, walking through New York with a Leica and a world unfolding without permission. No Eye AF. No predictive tracking. No comforting green boxes assuring technological salvation. There was only observation, timing, and the fragile chemistry between photographer and street. And yet Levitt produced photographs that still pulse with intelligence and tenderness. Curious.
Then comes the inconvenient procession of photographic history. Henri Cartier-Bresson with rangefinder limitations and parallax dancing permanently at the edge of precision. Robert Frank driving through America with grain, imperfection, and emotional abrasion baked directly into The Americans. Garry Winogrand embracing instability with such manic conviction that many of his frames seem to exist halfway between accident and revelation. Apparently civilization survived.
But perhaps the most uncomfortable examples for the perfection cult are not merely documentary photographers. They are the authors who deliberately rejected polished certainty.
Nan Goldin never built her visual language around technical cleanliness. Her photographs breathe precisely because they refuse cosmetic control. Flash burns. Blur. Intimacy bordering on collapse. Human vulnerability does not arrive pre-calibrated.
And then there is Luigi Ghirri. Imagine presenting certain Ghirri photographs to today's technical absolutists: fragments of cars, edges, obstructions, visual interruptions. The sacred composition not delivered like a finished architectural rendering but suggested, disturbed, left slightly unresolved. One suspects some forum commentators would demand firmware compensation for existential ambiguity.
Ghirri understood something many equipment evangelists never do: a photograph does not always need to explain itself completely. Sometimes it invites participation.
Which brings us to Guido Guidi. Guidi does not hand you certainty wrapped in geometrical perfection. His photographs often feel unfinished in the most intelligent sense of the word, as if the image asks the viewer to complete its internal architecture. Space hesitates. Composition breathes. Meaning unfolds gradually rather than arriving fully domesticated.
And for those still clutching their autofocus performance charts like emergency flotation devices, there is William Eggleston. Poor Eggleston, still frightening the technically devout decades later. His democratic vision, his ordinary subjects, his refusal to seek obvious visual heroics, his willingness to photograph what polite photographic culture considered beneath importance. Technically perfect? That was never the point. Alive? Absolutely.
And this is the scandal perfectionists struggle to metabolize, because the cult of technical certainty often hides a more uncomfortable reality: a profound fear of ambiguity.
Photography becomes safer when reduced to measurable performance. Sharpness can be quantified. Autofocus accuracy can be charted. Dynamic range can be compared. Meaning cannot. And meaning is dangerous territory, because it demands vulnerability, imagination, and occasionally failure.
So instead we have built an entire parallel photography industry devoted to avoiding the terrifying question: what are you actually trying to say? It is much easier to discuss focus hit rates. Much safer to perform expertise through specifications.
The result is a growing mountain of photographs that are technically immaculate and spiritually sedated. Images so sharp they could cut glass, saying almost nothing. Beautiful camera tests mistakenly introduced as photography.
Now, before someone accuses this argument of technological romanticism, let us be clear. Good tools are wonderful. Autofocus is useful. Precision matters. But precision is a servant, not a religion. And when photographers begin worshipping technical perfection as an end in itself, photography starts losing its pulse.
Because history has already made its decision. Not through laboratory measurements, but through the photographs that remained. Levitt remained. Goldin remained. Ghirri remained. Guidi remained. Eggleston remained. Not because their cameras eliminated uncertainty, but because they embraced it.
So perhaps the real question is not whether your camera can achieve flawless focus at impossible speeds. The real question is far more uncomfortable: if the autofocus suddenly disappeared tomorrow, would you still have something worth photographing?
C'mon, be honest with yourself. What is your role in photography? Author or… camera tester?
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11 Comments
Are you perhaps exaggerating a bit, my friend? I prioritize technical details in my photography, as you know, but it's certainly not a religious obsession, nor does it concern me that other photographers have other priorities. Diversity is what makes the world go 'round. I can't even find where you get the idea that sharpness and autofocus draw people who emphasize that sort of thing together into some sort of group, much as less a cult, especially loud and noisy ones preaching on every street corner. Or maybe I just don't pay attention to social media circles. No loss there. It seems however that whenever there's a Fstoppers article pertaining to focus and sharpness, it takes your position which essentially mocks the desirability of technical detail. I certainly find myself defending the position more than attacking yours.
To answer your final question, I don't concern myself with trying to say something through my images. I merely use photography as a way to connect with the world around me, and by showing my photos I want you to see something in a way that provokes your interest and examination. Or maybe just appeals to your sense of beauty. Nothing wrong with that. Photography has been used by many people for many other reasons, calling attention to social or environmental issues, perhaps. It's all good. I'm not sure if my work makes me an author... In the literal sense, authors write and photographers photograph.
I don't think I am exagerating. I am sure that many know everything about cameras and discovering a lot of the names made here as photographers for the first time or they are not familiar with them. In most of disciplines from sport to art I can see the one only focused on technique making a cold work, perfect, but without that particular thing, maybe also that imperfection making sublime the work. When we look at images 400% on a monitor, well, that is not a way to see and enjoying photography. That is my opinion, of course. Exactly as I believe that not: a photographer can be an author, and exactly of them, authors we remember and not the others. Visual culture > Technical knowledge.
Since you mention sports.... Imperfect athletes do not go far in the world of professional sports. A golfer who hits the ball off the course and out into the street may find himself as the center of something to laugh and talk about in the bar enjoying a beer afterwards, but nobody will ever seriously take him as a professional golfer. Athletes don't typically study visual culture, they study technical details that make them successful. Sports is loaded with science, math and technical strategy.... move to such and such a position, turn your body this way, get the ball out of your hands in less than 3.6 seconds, etc. Our American football players have to study detailed player positioning maps to make things work as a team, sort of like composition makes a photo work. Coaches analyze the game in the same manner that I scrutinize the monitor at 400%, although to be fair I usually stop at 200%. Details are what success is built upon, for me and my work, and for you too in your photography. You just value expression and emotion more than sharpness and shadow detail. I am the reverse.
" You just value expression and emotion more than sharpness and shadow detail. " Yes, I am in good company.
The comment you just made in the other article about playing the SEO game is why I think you're exaggerating in this article. The whole first paragraph about cults, autofocus clergy and laboratory monks sounds like some alternate universe. It may not even be an accurate reflection of your own true values, or so you say is possible in the other article. And it definitely sets up a confrontational situation for anyone who prioritizes autofocus speed.
By the way, I do not care about autofocus speed or frames per second. I could even live without automatic focus at all since I often manually focus, especially with my macro lens.
Regarding your picture of the little boy, yes there are always viewers who are attracted to expression, as there are viewers attracted to pretty sunset images. One is not inherently better than another. One does not universally "say" anything more profoundly than the other. A little boys expression is no more or less captivating than the wonder of nature. You can only decide what has the most meaning and emotional value for yourself.
I just happen to value adding a little polish in the form of technical details to my photos. The structure of this plant would not have the same impact if it were slightly blurry. Details bring the wonder of nature into focus for the viewer. If you happen to have an iMac or other high-resolution monitor, click on this picture and tell me that the sharpness which renders exquisite texture and detail doesn't make a huge difference in visual impact for the viewer.
It is a different genre. And maybe you should always consider that my speech is not in general but coming from a documentary photographer's point of view. Indeed I don't think by posting this photograph you are on topic with my article. The photograph I shared of course is not mine and I hope most of people recognize that is a famous one made by Henri Cartier-Bresson. Anyway, as I said: I specialized in documentary and street photography and I am talking about that. Not even interested to talk about flowers, macro or product photos that is not my kind of photography at all. Maybe that is the misunderstanding here.
I highly doubt most people recognize the child as a photo by Cartier-Bresson. I did not. In my opinion, he was undoubtedly a famous photographer and had much to say about the subject worth considering but did not make, in my opinion, memorable pictures.
The topic of your article, as introduced in the first paragraph, is sharpness and auto focus. Your sentence "Photography did not emerge from technical perfection." is generally applied, not just restricted to a particular genre. It's also a comment that could be debated since lens design which affected the desired sharpness vs. softness (and appropriate depth of field) was fundamental to the discussion of photography in the 1800s.
The title to your article invites a response from more than just readers who identify as documentary or street photographers. And interpreting the subject from one's own unique or different background in photography is entirely normal. Since you're not interested in macro and nature photography, then I guess it's a good time to end the discussion.
Next time I will clarify that my thoughts are from a documentary photographer point of view. I thought it was sufficient the biography in the end of the article, I see that is not.
First, thanks for the article, I greatly enjoyed it. I started off into photography long before the digital systems that now dominate. This article got me thinking about those days, also, I spent yesterday trying to clean out my darkroom. We strove for technical excellence because the tools made you work for it, we accepted competence. Manual everything and a wait for the image. We had to learn how to know we got the photo. Today, with our technical dream machines, we don't have to work that hard to know or surpass that basic competence. So where does that leave us after the technical side is mostly settled and reinforced by immediate evaluation? Photography is a split between technical execution and creative vision, it becomes important to achieve a balance. All technical, yes, basically a camera/software test and often dull, all concept, generally unreadable. Intent is crucial to where the balance point is placed. even if you manage to achieve a balance, success is not guaranteed as anyone who tried photography for more than 5 minutes has experienced. Accepting the imperfections can make an image more human. Successful photos can be made by a photographer, historic, iconic photographs are made by time. After teaching and judging for more than 25 years and spending a lot of time discussing how, maybe we need to make a conscious change to why.
I also agree with the article that having these modern tools allows us to do amazing work, I've been able to photograph scenes that the old days of film would have struggled to handle. I can remember the day 35mm film no longer became useful to me, but the simpler times of my old Canon F-1n remain enticing.
As for my darkroom, i'm going to try to find some balance to my digital ambitions with some good old fashioned, black and white, 4x5 film meditation.
Thanks for your comment, Ian. I appreciate the sharing your experience here. The human factor even in this AI era is still important.