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Beyond Deepfakes: A History of Visual Deception
Locales: UNITED STATES, FRANCE, UNITED KINGDOM

Beyond Deepfakes: A History of Visual Deception
We live in an era defined by anxieties surrounding Artificial Intelligence, particularly the rise of convincingly realistic AI-generated images. The term "deepfake" has entered the public consciousness, sparking legitimate concerns about the erosion of truth and the potential for widespread misinformation. However, the unsettling reality is that the manipulation of images to shape perception is not a new phenomenon. In fact, it's a practice almost as old as photography itself, predating AI by over a century.
Today, on Monday, March 9th, 2026, it's crucial to recognize that AI hasn't created the problem of visual deception--it has merely amplified it. A compelling new exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, "Manipulated: The Digital Age New Art," skillfully illustrates this point, tracing the history of manipulated photography from its very beginnings. The exhibition powerfully demonstrates that humans have consistently sought to alter photographic representations to serve diverse, and often dubious, agendas.
One might assume manipulation began with the advent of digital editing software, but even the earliest photographers weren't passive recorders of reality. Consider Theodore Gericault's monumental 1819 painting, "The Raft of the Medusa." While not a photograph, the artwork employed a staged and meticulously crafted composition. Gericault didn't simply witness the aftermath of the shipwreck; he painstakingly arranged models, props, and lighting to maximize the emotional impact of the scene. This early example highlights a fundamental principle: even before the camera, artists understood the power of carefully constructed visuals to evoke specific responses.
However, the advent of photography dramatically lowered the barrier to visual manipulation, making it faster, cheaper, and potentially more widespread. The First World War proved to be a fertile ground for photographic propaganda. The infamous image of a German soldier purportedly crucified by Belgian civilians in 1914 became a potent symbol of German barbarity, fueling anti-German sentiment in Britain and France. While the image effectively served its purpose of rallying public support for the war, it was later exposed as a fabrication - a calculated piece of wartime propaganda. The speed at which this hoax spread illustrates a pattern that continues today: emotionally charged, misleading images can circulate rapidly, influencing public opinion before they can be debunked.
Even photographers lauded for their commitment to documentary realism weren't immune to staging. Dorothea Lange's iconic photographs of the Great Depression, while undeniably powerful in portraying the suffering of the era, often involved a degree of staging. Lange didn't simply capture scenes as they unfolded; she actively sought out subjects who embodied the narrative she wanted to convey and then directed them into poses that amplified the sense of hardship. This doesn't necessarily invalidate the emotional truth of her images, but it does reveal the inherent subjectivity present even in seemingly objective documentation.
This trend continued in the mid-20th century. In the 1940s, Gordon Parks, a photographer for Life magazine, staged a photograph of a young girl kneeling in prayer inside a segregated Southern church. The intent was to elicit sympathy for African Americans facing racial discrimination, but the artifice of the scene raises ethical questions about the use of manipulation, even in pursuit of a perceived just cause. The photograph, while striking, wasn't a spontaneous capture of reality but a constructed representation designed to evoke a specific emotional response.
The Met's exhibition serves as a timely reminder that the current crisis of "fake news" and deepfakes is merely a technologically advanced iteration of a much older problem. The vulnerability to deception is inherent in the human psyche, and photography--regardless of the tools used--has always been susceptible to manipulation. Therefore, tackling the issue isn't about simply banning or regulating AI; it's about fostering critical thinking skills, media literacy, and a healthy skepticism towards all visual information. We must learn to question the source, consider the context, and recognize the potential for manipulation, whether it's achieved through darkroom techniques, digital editing, or artificial intelligence. The real danger isn't the technology itself, but our willingness to accept what we see without questioning its authenticity.
Read the Full Forbes Article at:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/lesliekatz/2026/02/10/a-century-before-ai-fake-photos-were-already-fooling-us/
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