How many photos are added to Facebook every day? 300 million! Given this exponential proliferation of images, there can be no doubt that photography is a global force to be reckoned with in the 21st Century. It was this virtual explosion of the visual image that inspired the Salzburg Global Seminar to convene the session “Power in Whose Palm: The Digital Democratization of Photography” to examine the blurring of the lines between photographic art, journalism, and citizen journalism and to discuss the broader implications thereof for our societies.
Salzburg Global Seminar is grateful to the Edward T. Cone Foundation for its generous support of Session 502.
Additional Support was provided by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
Salzburg Global Seminar would like to thank the session panelists for donating their time and expertise to this collaborative project. The Seminar gratefully acknowledges the assistance of all participants, whose diverse experience and ideas informed the session and the report.
In February 2013, the Salzburg Global Seminar convened the session “Power in Whose Palm: The Digital Democratization of Photography.” As an organization committed to addressing issues of global concern and to promoting dialogue among cultures for more than sixty-five years, the Salzburg Global Seminar took the view that this was an important moment to explore photography’s transformative power against the backdrop of the profound technological changes brought about by digitalization.
To this end, and with the generous support of The Edward T. Cone Foundation, SGS brought forty-eight world-renowned and emerging photographers, educators, scholars of photography, representatives of photo agencies, photography museums, festivals and centers, print and web media representatives, web entrepreneurs, and photo editors from twenty-five countries around the globe to Salzburg.
This multi-disciplinary, international group of participants included representatives of FACEBOOK, FLICKR, DEMOTIX, and the renowned photo-agencies VII and Magnum. Together, they examined the blurring of the lines between photographic art, journalism, and advocacy, and discussed the broader implications thereof for our societies, with the goal of inspiring a greater awareness of photography’s capacity to affect social change. In addition, participants exchanged views on visual literacy and photography’s role in education, the implications of increasingly democratized and decentralized distribution channels for visual images , and the ethics of usage in the age of the internet.
Given the diversity of the participants, the seminar was highly interactive, encouraging cross-cultural comparisons and experiences and providing an opportunity to contrast and compare perspectives from around the world. In the words of one participant:
"The Salzburg Global Seminar was an eye and mind opening experience that has further shifted how I view my work, the community at large, my relationship as a photographer within it and the role of visual literacy. Interacting with people from different backgrounds with their own unique stories, viewpoints and expertise provided me with a collective of rich contextual situations that illuminated previously unthought of ideas. I was very much inspired the group work as I learnt ways in which I can creatively and critically think about the foundations of visual grammar and work hand in hand with feedback from my fellow seminar participants to create an active working contextual content that I can incorporate in the future."
- Barbara Minishi, Kenya
The convening relied on collaborative debate and discussion in a series of presentations and plenary sessions, coupled with deeper analysis in four working groups. A keynote presentation From Memory to Experience opened the session, in which VII Photo Agency director Stephen Mayes reflected on the transformation of photography from an object to an experience.
The ensuing plenary sessions and small groups focused on the following themes and questions:
In addition an Open Studio evening allowed participants to share their creative work with each other, with more than fifteen photographers giving five-minute “snapshots” of their work. Participants were also invited to an evening at the Galerie Fotohof, linking the session to the local arts scene in Salzburg.
For More Information Contact:
Salzburg Global Seminar
Susanna Seidl-Fox
Program Director, Culture and the Arts
sfox@salzburgglobal.org
Session Report
Click here to download the print version (in PDF)
Click here to view the online version
Session Summary
Click here to download the session summary (in PDF)
List of Participants
Click here for the complete list of participant
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External Press Coverage
Wiener Zeitung Interview with Lara Baladi - "Es ist wie ein Fieber"(In German)