Our Obsession With Photography And Fear of The Sublime
Why we're obsessed with taking photos when we're traveling
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The story started with me wandering through an art gallery alone when I was seventeen. Like any teenager with his usual angst, I was reading Schopenhauer and Nietzsche religiously while secretly devising a plan to escape high school, smoke a cigarette in the parking lot and then odd-job around to make a living.
Almost everything grates a seventeen-year-old’s nerves, and one particularly annoyed me in the gallery. I saw waves of people taking photographs, not of paintings, but of themselves in front of paintings.
Five years later, after surviving high school and a B.A. in English, I found myself in Paris walking among landmarks my seventeen-year-old self would’ve sold his kidneys to see. Jardin des Plantes, Musée Rodin and Hôtel des Invalides just to name a few. Again, I saw the same wave of people taking photographs: not of the landmarks, but of themselves in front of them.
Maybe five years of life evened out my temper a little. I wasn’t annoyed but curious. I brought up this point with a local, André, to get his two cents, and in his typical Parisian manner, he said:
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