Wikipedia:WikiProject History of photography

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[edit] Scope

This WikiProject aims at improving articles about the history of photography. "History" certainly includes contemporary history, but the mere fact that somebody verifiably takes photographs for a living does not mean that an article on that person is needed for an encyclopedia.

The emphasis in this Project is on the photographs that result from cameras, darkrooms, printers and other gizmos, not on those gizmos themselves, fascinating though they may be.

[edit] Good (or better) articles

It's not only us who think that these articles are pretty good.

This list is appallingly short. Let's make it longer.

[edit] Short-term to do list

[edit] Notability criteria for photographers

Provisionally, a notable photographer is one who meets one or more of these criteria:

  • whose work has appeared in at least one solo exhibition that has been noted in more than a merely local press
  • whose work has been turned into one book-length collection, put out by a (non-vanity) commercial publisher or university press
  • whose work has been published within books that have received critical attention for their photography
  • whose work is included in the permanent collection of a prominent museum or gallery. One way to see if a photographer meets this criterion is to look him or her up in one of the books of photography that are based on museum holdings; note that Taschen publishes a very modestly priced and substantial compendium for each of George Eastman House (Rochester) and Museum Ludwig (Cologne).
  • who is significant historically (e.g. the first to photograph this or that)
  • who, though a photographer, is better known for other contributions to photography (e.g. Walter Woodbury, principally known as an innovator of photographic equipment and processes)
  • who is awarded an article or otherwise dealt with in detail within a well regarded and wide-ranging survey of photography. These include, but are not limited to:
    • The Photography Book (Phaidon, 1997)
    • The Oxford Companion to the Photograph (Oxford UP, 2005)
  • who is included in at least one of the following authoritative online resources. [These sites also provide the most accepted forms (in English) of many photographers' names and often include brief biographical information as well.]

[edit] Participants

Please feel free to add {{User HOP}} to your user page to indicate your membership in this project. Your visitors will then be dazzled and delighted by:

This user participates in the WikiProject History of Photography.
 

[edit] Resources

/Resources

is where you go for resources.

[edit] Related and potentially confusable WikiProjects

[edit] Article grading

Please help us grade articles as well as improve them. We're using the 1.0 assessment system, perhaps with minor changes as yet to be worked out on our talk page.

(For the time being, we're not aiming to label any article as "Class A": such articles are normally drawn from non-Featured articles already recognized as "Good", and we have a total of just two of these.)

The method by which you attach the grade is explained below, under "Template". Look among articles that haven't been tagged with our template, and also among those already tagged but not yet assessed.

(Some pages need not and perhaps should not be graded; you'll find examples here.)

[edit] Featured and Good articles

A "Featured Article" ("FA") or "Good Article" (GA) will already be so marked in its talk page and also listed here (FA) or here (GA); if you happen to notice a relevant FA or GA that we haven't, do please tag it accordingly.

Those already tagged are listed here (FA) and here (GA).

[edit] B, Start and Stub Class articles

Tag any B class article as B unless you were its primary editor; tag any Start or Stub class article as Start or Stub. If you were the primary editor of what you think is a B class article, tag it without grading it.

Those already tagged are listed here (B class), here (start class), and here (stubs).

(Note also the photography, photographer, and American photographer stub categories, created independently of this project.)

[edit] Upgrades

Upgrade any stub to "Start" if you think "Start" is deserved. Upgrade any "Start" to "B" if (i) you think "B" is deserved and (ii) you're not the article's main author.

If you think an article of which you're the main author is "B" class despite having been graded more harshly, first try to contact whoever it was that previously graded the article, and persuade him/her. If this isn't possible, you can bring the matter up on our talk page.

[edit] Downgrades

If you think an FA doesn't deserve the rating, bring the matter up at FA review; for a GA, see GA review. Also, please mention it on our talk page.

If you think an article rated B or Start doesn't deserve the rating, bring the matter up on the article's own talk page. Also, look in the history of that talk page to find who applied the rating, and invite that person to the article's talk page.

Better, improve the article so that it does deserve the rating.

[edit] Template

This page is within the scope of WikiProject History of photography, an attempt to build a comprehensive and detailed guide to articles on the history of photography on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, you can edit the article attached to this page, or visit the project page, where you can join the project and/or contribute to the discussion.

Here it is. And a big round of applause for Badbilltucker for creating it for us.

Stick it in an article talk page by adding {{WikiProject_HOP}}. Alternatively, add {{WikiProject_HOP|class=??}}, where "??" is FA for Featured Article, GA for Good Article, B for "B class", Start for "start class", Stub for "stub class", NA for "grading not applicable", all according to the regular assessment criteria. Please don't rate any article as "A class", and please don't rate as "B class" any article to which you have been the major contributor.

Print this out and stick it on your wall. Email it to a friend. Have it tattooed on your -- ah, no, perhaps not. But spread the word.