# 6536 / common things • flora ~ happy happy, joy joy

(embiggenable)

IT HAS BEEN A WHILE SINCE I HAVE MADE color prints to a very exacting look and feel. So, I am extremely pleased that, after a little (very little) printer maintenance followed by number of calibration settings test prints, my 20 year old Epson 7800 Stylus Pro is banging out perfect prints one after another, no adjustments needed. The prints in question are for inclusion in an An Adirondack Survey folio-actually 2 identical folios-that will be submitted, along with a 55 picture photo book of the same name, to gallery and art institution directors.

Re: the photo book. The proof book has arrived and, no surprise, the 6-color printing is right on the money. A couple images required minor adjustments, 2 pictures are being swapped out for pictures that are variations of the same scenes, and I am adding 4-5 additional pictures to the book. I like the flow of the book as is so no changes there. Next up is the printing of a 12x12 final book.

Assuming that the finished book is A-OK-there is no reason to believe that it won’t be-it is off to the races.

# 6530-32 / kitchen sink ~ backed up

(embiggenable)

(embiggenable)

(embiggenable)

BEEN CONCENTRATING ON THE An Adirondack Survey project and realized that I had a number of recently-made kitchen sink pictures stacking up / not posted.

So, since I am at a point with the AAS project where all the variables are worked out and am waiting for the proof book to show up (scheduled for tomorrow), I thought I would take a break and get the kitchen sink pictures posted.

PS No matter what the circumstances might be, you can rest assured that I will not be posting on this blog any entries about gear, pool, my health, swimming, filing taxes, or any other non-photographic, kaffeeklatsch topics.

# 6519-29 / common places • common things ~ have camera, will travel

through the sunroof opening of my car ~ (embiggenable)

(embiggenable)

(embiggenable)

(embiggenable)

(embiggenable)

(embiggenable)

(embiggenable)

(embiggenable)

(embiggenable)

(embiggenable)

a tree grows in Brooklyn ~ (embiggrnable)

DROVE TO NYC THIS WEEKEND TO SEE A Broadway play. Had no real intention to make pictures but, as it turned out, I made enough pictures to make a 20-picture POD book.

Stayed with extended family-the wife’s brother’s family-in Brooklyn. After the play met with more extended family-the wife’s older sister’s and older brother’s family members-for drinks and snacks at an Irish Pub in the NYC Theater District.

Had no real intention to make pictures but ,nevertheless, I made enough pictures to make a 20-picture POD book. And, it was while I was in the Times Square / Theater District, I discovered that I should return to NYC for 2-day photo project-photographing food carts. The picture making possibilities are, seemingly, endless. And, I get tingly all over just thinking about the dusk hour possibilities-colorful food carts together with about a billion neon lights + video billboards. Might even need some anti-seizure meds.

In any event, as is often the case, during this trip I did not make a single picture that included a family member. Although, there was one related harrowing event. After getting a passerby to agree to make a picture, the family members clustered together for a family picture-lower Manhattan skyline in the background. On a strongly-held anti-cliche picture making principle, I refused to participate-neither the making of or being pictured therein-but, after the picture was made, the SOBs bolted over to where I was hiding / sulking and had another picture made.

Rats. Foiled once again.

# 6513-18 / common places • common things • people ~ an adirondack survey

cover ideas ~ (embiggenable)

sample spread ~ (embiggenable)

sample spread ~ (embiggenable)

sample spread ~ (embiggenable)

sample spread ~ (embiggenable)

THE AN ADIRONDACK SURVEY PROJECT IS MOVING right along. Picture editing has yielded a 165 photographs body of work. 50 of those pictures have been selected for use in a 12x12 book. 20 of those selections will be printed for inclusion in a presentation folio for submission (+ the book) to galleries and art institutions.

And, the ink is flowing. Printing-on my Epson wide-format (24 inch) printer-of the folio photographs is a work-in-progress. A reduced size-10x10-“proof” book is being printed. That book is being produced by the same POD book printing source using all the same specs that the “final” 12x12 book will employ. The proof book will give an opportunity to check on each photo for reproduction accuracy and to get a feel for the editing sequencing. If necessary, modifications-color, brightness, vibrancy, et al-to individual photos can be made prior to final printing. And, it is possible that a few photos might be edited out and substitutions made.

All part of the final fine tuning cuz it all has to feel just “right”.

# 6510-12 / common places • common things • tangles ~ under snow detritus revealed

(embiggenable)

(embiggenable)

(embiggenable)

SPRING IS OFFICIALLY HERE AND I GLADLY WELCOME IT for 2 reasons; 1) I am sick of the rotating on-again, off-again winter we have been experiencing, and, 2) all of the dead autumn detritus mixed with early emerging spring growth is prime time for picture making.

The pictures in this entry were made last year during the very short window-for picture making-between emerging spring growth and full-on spring growth. Not only is the timing critical but, for my desired picture making result, so is the weather, or, more accurately, so is the light. That’s cuz soft, overcast light is required / mandatory for my intentions.

And then, there is the full-frame vs square-frame thing. For reasons not determined / understood, last year’s pictures were made utilizing the full-frame format. Apparently, I guess that, at that time, that is just the way I was seeing it. I like the result so this year it’s on with same show, framing wise.

# 6507-09 / kitchen sink • common places • common things ~ putting it all together

at someone’s house-NOT MINE-on St. Patrick Day ~ (embiggenable)

(embiggenable)

(embiggenable)

a few samples from my An Adirondack Survey work ~ (embiggenable)

I HAVE NOT BEEN THINKING ABOUT BLOG WISE THINGS over the past week or so. Rather, my time has been occupied with editing out from my photo library approximately 120 pictures for my emergent body of work, An Adirondack Survey ~ as seen in pictures.

The body of work is comprised of pictures-in and of the Adirondacks-that were made over the past 22 years-the length of my Adirondack residency-of my picture making life. Many of these pictures were exhibited as converted-into-snapshot pictures in my solo gallery exhibition, Adirondack Snapshot Project (there are a few samples on my WORK page). In the case of this iteration, the pictures are presented as simple, straight photographic color prints.

In any event, the kick-in-the-butt instigation for assembling this body of work was the re-reading of a 1976 press release from MOMA-announcing the opening of the Color Photographs by William Eggleston exhibition-in which John Szarkowski was quoted as expressing the idea that:

…these photographs are perfect: irreducible surrogates for the experience they pretend to record, visual analogues for the quality of one life, collectively a paradigm of a private view….Eggleston, who lives in Memphis, Tennessee, finds his private, even insular subject matter in the commonplace realities of that city and its environs….While his photographs comprise a remarkable and surprising commentary on contemporary American life, his work is more the engagement of a personal vision than a social document.

My reading of the press release, taken in its entirety, caused me to look at my Adirondack pictures in a new light inasmuch as:

my photographs are visual analogues for the quality of my life, a private view of subject matter found in the commonplace realities of the Adironacks where I live. My photographs-an engagement of personal vision rather than a social documentary-comprise a somewhat surprising-as in rarely seen before-commentary on contemporary Adirondack life.

In order to circulate this work, I am in the process of making a 20 print portfolio and a 50 picture hardbound book for submission to a number of galleries / art institutions. And, I must admit to a degree of fear and trepidation inasmuch as I am laying it all on the line-my personal vision wise-with the submission-to important regional galleries / arts organizations- of this significant collection of my picture making life’s work.

# 6506 / common places • common thing • winter ~ I don't want / need no stinkin' metaphors

(embiggenable)

IT WAS WRITTEN BY SOMEONE somewhere (or so wrote Stephen Shore):

Chinese poetry rarely trespasses beyond the bounds of actuality… the great Chinese poets accept the world exactly as they find it in all its terms and with profound simplicity… they seldom talk about one thing in terms of another; but are able enough and sure enough as artists to make the ultimately exact terms become the beautiful terms.

If there were to be a credo for making straight photographs-bits lifted from the visceral world with such tact and cunning that they seem true-iMo, this would be it.

# 6499-6501 / common places • common things ~ It's true. Really, I swear it is.

it’s true to life ~ (embiggenable)

it’s true to life ~ (embiggenable)

it’s true to life ~ (embiggenable)

ON A RECENT TOP ENTRY THE IDEA OF A PHOTOGRAPH being true / truthful was raised. A subject which always brings out those who like to dance on the head of pin. Consequently, I very rarely pay much attention to such commentary on the subject. That said, I’ll throw caution to the winds and wade into the subject.

First things first; I believe the words true / truthful are misnomers, re: a photograph. That’s cuz a photograph, a thing in and of itself, is, quite obviously (or should be) not the thing that it depicts. Rather, it is depiction of something. And, to my way of seeing / thinking, in the so-called straight photography world I look for depictions that are reasonably accurate representations, inasmuch as the medium and its apparatus is capable, of the thing depicted. And I leave it at that cuz I know…

“…. most serious photographers understand that there's this large gap between the world and how the world looks through a photograph. ~ Stephen Shore

Despite the “large gap between the world and how the world looks through a photograph”, straight photographs, made by both serious photographers and amateur snapshooters, all illustrate recognizable subject matter. Simply put, the depicted referent is recognizable cuz the depiction thereof-the visual essence-is reasonably accurate.

Does that make a given photograph truthful? Well, according to the dictionary-(of artistic or literary representation) characterized by accuracy or realism; true to life-the answer is “Yes, it is truthful.” However, I would write that the visual essence of a straight photograph can be accurate, realistic, or, if you prefer, true to life.

Which leads to this conclusion:

There's something essentially fictive about a photograph. That doesn't mean that if you understand that, and you understand how the world is transformed by the camera, that you can't use the limitations or the transformation to have an observation that is a very subtle perception of the world.” ~ Stephen Shore

All of the above written, there is a catch / fly in the truthy ointment of any given photograph; a photograph is capable of having two different attributes - the literally depicted referent, and, the content, aka: the picture maker’s concept-driven intent (often labeled as the meaning to be had in a photograph). These are two very different things.

Although, to the eye and sensibilities of the picture maker these two attributes-the visual essence and concept (which the picture maker believes to be true)-are inexorably / intrinsically linked. However, to the eye and sensibilities of a viewer of any given photograph, as Susan Sontag has noted….

Photographs, which cannot themselves explain anything, are inexhaustible invitations to deduction, speculation, and fantasy.

….a picture maker’s conceptual truth is, at best, illusive. And, even if discerned, it could be-re: in the sensibilities, if not the eye, of a viewer-to be un-truthful.

So, getting down to brass tacks, re: can a photograph be truthful? The answer, iMo, is both “Yes.” and “No.” That is, “Yes.”, re: visual essence, and “No.”-or maybe better put as “Anyone’s guess.”-re: the implied concept.

In any event, I am not much concerned about the truth in photography thing cuz, like Garry Winogrand

“I photograph to find out what something will look like photographed.”