A Purist Viewpoint on Nature
Photography
Nature photography, as defined
by the Photographic Society of America (PSA) rules, requires that there be no evidence of
the hands of man. This prohibition has been much debated among photographers and the
public alike. Usually the debate arises as a result of the contention that man is part of
the natural world; and, therefore, man and his creations should be included in nature
photography. From that assertion, it is not uncommon for the debate to splinter off into
the philosophical argument of the origin of man. But the origin of man is irrelevant for
the purpose of classification of photographs. Classification of anything depends upon a
line drawn for inclusion or exclusion. The more narrow the definition line is drawn, the
easier the task of classification. When classification is defined too broadly, then what
is included and excluded becomes arbitrary and unreasonable.
To draw a line that includes
man in the definition of nature photography would also by definition include the hands of
man. Of course, it is precisely the exclusion of the hands of man which many people find
troublesome. They feel that cultivated plants, such as hybrid roses, are as much a
part of nature as a wildflower; a domesticated dog is as much a part of nature as an
African wild dog, and so forth. But what they do not contemplate is that such an
inclusion would be too broad a definition. For if man were included, then any
photograph taken outdoors would be within the nature category: travel, adventure,
environmental portraiture and even architecture.
Most people would find it
difficult to place Mount Rushmore in the same category as El Capitan. Yet both are stone
and both are outdoors. And even more difficult for most people would be to place a
swimsuit model on the beach in the same category as a crocodile sunning on the
beach. But under the more broadly defined "nature" category, to
exclude the Mount Rushmore and the swimsuit model photographs would be arbitrary and
unreasonable. Under PSA rules, Mount Rushmore and the swimsuit model are both excluded
from nature photography because both violate the hands of man prohibition..
The line drawn by the PSA
excludes man and/or manmade objects in the classification of nature photography with a
few, narrow exceptions. Those narrow exceptions are for a wild animal (as a species) who
has become so habituated to mans world as to become associated with it. The sterling
example is the Barn Owl which is photographed inside a barn. This exception would not
extend, however, to a photograph of a Barn Owl on the handrail of a diving board, for the
Barn Owl is not habituated to diving boards. Another exception is animals which are
tagged, and collared in the wild but which otherwise remain free.
The prohibition of the hands
of man in the definition of a nature photograph makes it easier to classify photographs
and makes for greater fairness in competitions. But the same definition should apply
whether the photograph is in an exhibition or a competition. When people refer to any soft
drink as a coke or any photocopy as a Xerox, confusion will necessarily follow. The same
is true in nature photography.
--Chris Varner