# 5648-51 / noir•tangles•civilized ku ~ feeling it, not thinking it

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IN A COUPLE ENTRIES BACK, some of these pictures are just like the others, I mentioned the oft-heard lament that "everything that can be photographed has been photographed".

In doing so, I qualified that idea by writing that, in a general sense, there is some truth to that concept. However, what I failed to write was that, in a specific sense, that idea is totally absurd inasmuch as the planet and everything on it has a nearly incomprehensible amount of stuff-i.e., specific referents-that have never been photographed.

What might be more accurate to write is that many (most?) picturing genres have been worked to near death. And most of that work reaches the level of repetitive, carbon-copy cliche (as dictated by the "time-honored" picturing conventions of a given genre)-what Robert Adams called "the ten thousandth camera-club imitation of a picture by Ansel Adams". The net result is to create the impression, within the confines a given picture making genre, that, indeed, everything that can be photographed has been photographed.

That written, one of my favorite sites, Don't Take Pictures, has a semi-regular feature, Rule Breakers, that begins with the premise...

"I never want to see another picture of ________.” and, goes on with Industry Veterans who "share their pet peeves on themes in contemporary photography... [and] present their “rule” along with five photographs that break the rule in an effort to show that great work is the exception to the rule."

This exercise, re: Rule Breakers, is pretty much a rehash of the (once again) "time-honored" admonition that, even if everthing that can be pictured has already been pictured, one can create something beyond the cliche by making picures with one's own personal "take", the vision thing, added to the mix. That is, to stop making pictures of what one has been told is a good picture, and start making pictures of what one sees.

That's good advice but, unfortunately, it does seems that most picture makers "see" in cliches. They are unable to let of what they have been told is a good picture or what constitutes a suitable referent for picture making. And, most often their attempt to find their vision is to layer on flashy techniques and gobs of art sauce. iMo, that's cuz-and I know I'm treading on the third rail here-true vision, unlike technique, can not be taught*.

True vision can only be "discovered" within oneself, most often by an extensive course of trial and error. An undertaking characterized by continuous or natural development based upon the belief that innate ideas exist. Or, in other words, one's vision is kinda like a hidden, amorphous pre-exisitng condition which needs to be coaxed out of the shadows. The purpose of which is to recognize it / "feel" it, not to necessarily fully understand it, as the nativistic** / intuitive structual backbone of one's vision.

AN ASIDE: Consider this aside a warning or, alternately, an invitation. There is more to follow, re: the vision thing...how to "find" it, how to understand it and how to use it. END OF ASIDE

* "Self-education, only, produces expression of self." ~ Robert Henri / from his book, The Art Spirit, the only book one needs to read in one's quest to find one's vision and become a maker of good pictures.
** in the field of philosophy, the doctrine that the mind produces ideas that are not derived from external sources.

# 5637-42 / ku•landscape•natural world ~ some of these pictures are just like the others

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IT HAS BEEN SUGGESTED THAT EVERYTHING THAT CAN be pictured has been pictured. While that idea is not exactly true, it is close enough to be considered to be generally true. Case in point ....

In my last entry, wherein I wrote that I was rumaging around in my picture library looking for pictures for my next entry, this entry is the "next" entry to which I was referring. I was looking for pictures like the ones seen in this entry in response to my discovery of an announcement of an exhibit / book / limited edition folio of new pictures, NATURAL ORDER, from Edward Burtynsky

I admit that, when I viewed Burtynsky's NATURAL ORDER pictures, my first thought was that he had hacked into my picture library and "borrowed" some of my pictures for his project. A project which he undertook during the recent pandemic and which I have been pursuing for the last 20 years.

My second thought was that being a well known, "big name" picture maker sure makes it easy to get an exhibition along with all the attendant add-ons. I have yet to have an exhibit of my thickets & tangles work which could be due to the fact that, to date, I have not submited a porfolio of that work to any galleries...a prime example of you never get what you don't ask for.

All of that written, re: everything that can be pictured has been pictured - if a crow were to fly due west from where I live (and make pctures), in about 200 miles the crow would fly directly over the location where Burtynsky made his NATURAL ORDER pictures. So, given the nesrly identical flora-zones, it really is no surprise that our pictures are so similar-not exactly the same, but similar. Similar enough that Burtynsky could slip a few my pictures into his exhibit-and I could do likewise with a few of his pictures into my body of work-and no one would be the wiser.

As similar as our pictres might be, here's where I part ways with Burtynsky...in his Artist Statement, Burtynsky writes that his pictures are "from a place in [his] mind that aspires to wrest order out of chaos and to act as a salve in these uncertain times." He also asserts that "these images are an affirmation of ... the natural order in all things."

Unlike Burtynsky, I am not striving to wrest order out of chaos. Rather, my pictures are an attempt to illustrate and revel in-for its own sake-the visual beauty and energy to be found / seen in the disorderly / chaotic / seemingly serendipitous entanglements of selective parts of the natural world. And, my pictures are not intended to be a "salve" but rather, at least at first glance, a visual irritant.

That written, I do believe it is quite possible to be drawn into a protractive, quiet contemplation of the complex field of visual energy to be seen in both of our pictures. However, where that comtemplation might lead to is up to the viewer.

# 5619-30 / ku•landscape•natural world ~ "calendar" work v. art work

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MORIBUND-def. (of a thing) in terminal decline; lacking vitality or vigor. A word which, iMo, could justifiably be used in conjunction with the phrase / nomenclature of Landscape Photography.

To be clear, it should be noted that the genre of Landscape picture making is not an single organized picture making movement which adhers to a single, uniform picture making aesthetic / norms. I would not even try to count and/or describe the number of sub-genres taking refuge under the umbrella of Landscape picture making.

That written, I do believe that here is one undeniable fracture in Landscape picture making spectrum. That is, the picture making divide between the ANSEL Adams crowd and the ROBERT Adams crowd (feel free to choose your own particular examples).

iMo, the diference between the crowds is that the A. Adams crowd-by far the largest of the 2 crowds-focuses their attention and lenses on the grand, the majestic, the dramatic landscape. Most often with the intent of capturing sentimental / romanticized depictions of the natural world with the use of art sauce-to-the-max visual "hyperbole, theatrical gestures, moral postures and expresivo effects" (quote thanks to John Szarowski). And, it is well worth noting, there is, almost (but not quite) exclusively so, never any evidence of human kind in their pictures.

On the other side of that coin, there is the R. Adams crowd. A picture making crowd for whom "the shrill rodomontade of conventional conservation dialectics has lost its persuasive power" (again, a Swarkowski quote). A crowd which pictures the entire landscape to include, most definitely, evidence of humankind as well as the more quiet / ubiquitous (everyday) natural world. A crowd wihich has discovered that beautiful pictures can made by picturing referents which are not made up what are considered to be the trappings of iconical / conventional beauty.

A quote from Robert Adams, taken from his Introduction in his book The New West kinda somes up, for me, the difference between the A. Adams and the R. Adams crowds:

"...we also need to see the whole geography, natural and man-made, to experience a peace; all land, no matter what has happened to it, has over it a grace, an absolutely persistent beauty....Even subdivisions, which we hate for the obcenity of the speculator's greed, are at certain times of day transformed to a dry, cold brilliance."

All of the above written and re: MORIBUND, iMo, it is the A. Adams crowd that is cononically moribund inasmuch as, for better or for worse, there practitioners aplenty which insures that the genre ain't dying. However, in the case of the R. Adams crowd, I have a sense of moribunity inasmuch as there has been little new activity and/or work from that crowd of late. At least, little that I am aware of.

It is possible that the paucity of such activity / work is a condition dictated, temporally, by COVID restrictions. It is also quite possible that my sense of real or imagined paucity is the result of my lack of concentrated effort in searching for such work.

That written, any recommendations of where to find such work will be well apppreciated.

# 5607-09 / people•ku•natural world•landscape ~ I look, I see, I picture, therfore I am

man with Sanshin ~ Naha, Okinawa / Japan - c.1967 (embiggenable)

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"The process of photographing is a pleasure: eyes open, receptive, sensing, and at some point, connecting. It's thrilling to be outside your mind, your eyes far ahead of your thoughts....Part of it has to do with the discipline of being actively receptive. At the core of this receptivity is a process that might be called soft eyes. It is a physical sensation. You are not looking for something. You are open, receptive. At some point you are in front of something that you cannot ignore." ~ Henry Wessel

I CAN ONLY ASSUME-WITH A HIGH DEGREE OF ASSURANCE- that just about everyone gets pleasure (of one sort or another) from the process of photographing. I mean, why even bother if there ain't no pleasure / joy / satisfaction / positive vibe involved in the activity?

That written, I am also certain that whatever sense of pleasure may be derived from the act of photographing, any specific pleasure is dependent upon the motivations of the picture maker him/herself. After all, the medium and its apparatus provide a broad landscape for satisfying a wide range of pleasure seeking....there are those who revel in the "pleasure" of acquiring / using and "mastering" gear and/or, likewise, technique. Then there are those who seek to "express" themselves or elucidate the viewer, re: the "meaning" of various referents.

And then there are those, much like me, who indulge in the act of photographing simply to see what something-any thing and/or every thing-looks like when photographed (as presented / expressed on the 2D surface of a photographic print).

That is, the making of a fairly stict visual thing. No expression of my "innner self", no "meaning" or "message", no technical / technique driven tour de force. Nope, none of that stuff. I just want to make prints that are visually interesting, capitivating and involving to view. Not cuz of what is depicted but, rather, how it is depicted.

For me, the idea of receptivity, aka: soft eyes, is paramount to my way of seeing. I rarely go out and about "looking for something" but, that written, I am forever-I am convinced that propensity is preternatural-looking and, seemingly, my thinking does not get in the way of my seeing. My eyes are ahead of my thoughts.

Consequently, throughout my entire life, I have consistently found myself "in front of something I cannot ignore".

#5585-87 / seeing red (6)•civilized ku (BW) ~ is ignorance really bliss?

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I WROTE RECENTLY THAT, AT TIMES, I CAN GET ANNOYED by items I encountered on the interweb, especally on photo sites. Items that I find to be specious, uninformed and/or out-right wrong-headed. A recent case in point:

"Ansel Adams sucked at color, in life as well as photography." ~ Micheal Johnston

Johnston dropped this comment in an entry wherein he was championing his never-ending case for a monochrome only digital camera. That is, one that-with a lens-does not cost as much as a decent used car. I have no horse in that race, however, I can not let his comment about Adams and color photography-do not have any idea what he meant by the idea that Adams, color wise, "sucked in life"-go by without a response....

....if all you know about Sir Ansel is his B&W oeuvre-both his prints and his Zone System-then you only know half the story. In fact, for over 40 years of Adams' picture making life he wrestled with the color medium-aesthetics and techniques. It is estimated that he made 3,500+ color pictures-transparencies-very few of which were ever printed. His commercial and editorial color work for corporations such as Kennecott Copper, Anaconda Mines, Eastman Kodak Co. (more than a dozen Coloramas) and the Polaroid Corp appeared in publications such as Life, Vogue, Horizons, Fortune and Arizona Highways.

Much of Adams' color work was underwritten / subsidized through his long-standing relationship with both Eastman Kodak and the Polaroid Corp. He took their films out in the field, pursued his color picture making fancies and submitted technical notes and evaluations to product development technicians in both companies. Nice work if you can get it.

While I could go on and on about Adams and his color photography, you would be better served by acquiring the book, Ansel Adams ~ In Color. The book has 55 beautifully reproduced color pictures-currated by the preeminent photographer Harry Callahan-and a very informative Introduction exploring a brief history of color photography and Adams' life of exploration of it.

Maybe Santa will leave a copy under Michael Johnston's Xmas tree. While he could read/view it sitting down, he should eventually be able to stand corrected.

# 5557-59 / odes to ~ you are what you eat

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"As great a picture can be made as one's mental capacity--no greater. Art cannot be taught; it must be self-inspiration, though the imagination may be fired and the ambition and work directed by the advice and example of others." - Edward Weston

ON YESTERDAY'S ENTRY, A COMMENT WAS LEFT BY Thomas Rink:

"As you already pointed out, there is neither "good" nor "bad" light. Each kind of light has its own particular quality, and will reveal different kinds of pictures. For example, consider "Oxbow Archive" by Joel Sternfeld, "The Desert Seen" by Lee Friedlander, and "Wald" by Michael Lange. All made under totally different lighting conditions. Mr. Sternfeld used decidedly picturesque lighting conditions to depict the New England landscape as a stage for Thomas Cole's pictures. "The Desert Seen" was made under very harsh light, and the washed out highlights and grayish shadows create an atmosphere which I would associate with scorching heat and aridity. "Wald", on the other hand, has been photographed in German forests at dusk, often in pouring rain. Mr. Lange told me that these conditions arose a certain mood within him that he considered quintessential for what a forest represents to him. I'm pretty sure that in all three cases the choice of light has been a conscious decision; Mr. Sternfeld didn't use this light since the peers in his camera club told him to do so, Mr Friedlander certainly hadn't just been too lazy to get up in time for the blue hour, and Mr. Lange didn't venture into the forest under ungodly conditions in order not to have to spend the evening in front of the TV together with his wife.

I believe that next to the choice of what should be in the frame, a kind of light suitable to convey the pictorial intent (for a lack of better words) is important to create a subjective, expressive picture. It is only "artistic sauce" if a certain kind of light is used in a mindless way - for example, the camera club buff who only goes out during the blue hour, or the MFA student who goes for the deadpan look just because Robert Adams did so. Understanding what light does, and how to employ this knowledge for my pictures, is what I try to learn.

my response: Thanks for the great comment. Much appreciated inasmuch as, while I am very familar with Sternfeld (I have 2 of his books) and Friedlander (I have 2 of his books), I knew nothing of Michael Lange.

In his comment, Thomas mentioned the work of Sternfeld, Friedlander and Lange as examples of his point. That caused me to dig into my photo library to see if I could find examples of my own work that bear more than a passing resemblance to their work in order to make a kinda Ode to ______ entry.

Then I dug out the Weston quote-from my quotes library-cuz it seems appropriate for this entry which references the work of others as learning examples of one kind or another.

re: the imagination may be fired and the ambition and work directed by the advice and example of others. I have a large collection of photo books. They are all mongraphs of individual picture makers. In additionto that resource, I have spent a lot time in my adult life visiting stand-alone and institutional photo galleries where in I have viewed the work of many of the big name picture makers and was lucky enough to have chatted with some ... such as Meyerowitz, Shore and Pfahl. So, it is fair to write that my overview of the medium is broad, deep and diverse.

FYI: that written, the single benefit-in addition to the pleasure of viewing the work-of such activity, for me, is not firing up my imagination but rather firing up my ambition / drive for making pictures. Not for making pictures which mimic work that I have viewed but rather for making pictures in the manner that my imagination guides me.

I was somewhat surprised to find the pictures displayed in this entry cuz, believe it or not, I was not familiar with Sternfeld's Oxbow Archive nor Friedlander's The Desert Seen. And, as mentioned, I was not familar with Lange's work at all. So, I found it interesting that I was able to find a few pictures which displayed a similar feel and look to that of the aforementioned picture makers.

In light of my viewing consumption of so much work, I guess the old adage is true...you are what you eat.

# 5552-56 / the light ~

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"Surrealism, the mystery of place, solitude, and a heightened sense of the nature of things - night photography seems a worthy vehicle, a ritual to express these themes." ~ Tim Baskerville

WHEN CONFRONTED WITH THE DIFFICULTY OF MAKING AN INTERESTING PICTURE of the real world as the the medium of photography and its apparatus record it, aka: straight photography, most picture makers resort to adding art sauce, of one kind or another, to what comes out of the camera. iMo, that practice is a manifestation of a picture maker's inability to connect with "an internal rather than an external part of life"...

"Photographs should be symbolic rather than descriptive...they should suggest to the reader an internal rather than an external part of life." ~ Erich Hartmann

Or, the inability to recognize that there might be "messages from another world" to be had...

"The camera is much more than a recording apparatus. It is a medium via which messages reach us from another world." ~ Orson Welles

An unfortunate fact of the human condition is that most people tend to want to escape from the real world rather than to attempt to connect with it. Consequently, re: the medium of photography and its appparatus, art sauce laden schlock out-"sells" straight photograph by a wide margin. That's cuz, for most, what is on the "surface" of a picture is the thing and an awareness of what might be beyond that surface is not part of the program.

Now, to be certain, we all need an "escape" now and again. That too is part of the human condition. However, that desire should be balanced with the idea that we all need to "get real" as well. Without that balance, it's all koyaanisqatsi.