The last time I was at a crowded museum I spent roughly 20% of the time just trying to avoid getting in the way of people taking pictures. Everyone was taking pictures everywhere of all the installations. I considered doing so too, but realized 20 years too late that there are far better photographs of a work of art (or at least enough) by professional photographers with different takes/interpretations than I could do without decades of training (on average). If you like a piece, there's nothing to stop you from buying a print or downloading a picture. I get it that some people do it more for remembering "that time I saw it in person" instead of trying to capture the essence of a piece, and that's fine (that's why I used to take the pictures), but multiply the amount of time it takes to do that by every piece you come across, plus how much posting it on instagram/whatever/facebook removes you from "the zone", and I think it's just a different way of massively disrupting your attention when the MAIN reason you're there in a museum, for a limited amount of time, is to suck it all up. I'm sure many people don't get distracted by trying to take photos of all the art, but once I stopped and just focused on concentrating and nothing else, a trip became much, much more enjoyable, and even memorable.
jdietrich|10 years ago
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0pDE4VX_9Kk&list=PLlhSx0L1hp...
branchless|10 years ago
asoplata|10 years ago
logicrook|10 years ago
- Get a quick access to references that are mentally organized (because of the trip), without having to take time to actually gather the pictures.
- The specific element might not be photographed, or not possible to find at least. Maybe it's the design of some doorknob that's really great, in the middle of the countryside. Good luck finding that on google. Even some painters in the rijksmuseum are impossible to find on the web, so...
- Nothing existing picture may be satisfying. Maybe the specific arrangement of shapes works best from a very specific point of view. Maybe it's because of the lightning conditions. There are many potential reasons.
- You can use the ref without fear of copyright infringement (well, orwellian states would differ, but nearly).
DerKommissar|10 years ago
skywhopper|10 years ago
Coincoin|10 years ago
moray|10 years ago
awesomerobot|10 years ago
shalmanese|10 years ago
[1] https://www.google.com/search?q=photos+of+crowd+mona+lisa&sa...
yoavm|10 years ago