# 6049-52 / update ~ there and back again

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THIS WEEKEND PAST, AS MENTIONED, I TRAVELED TO the Boston area with my grandson, Hugo, for the Eastern Hockey League (Juniors) Combine event. The combine is for scouts and coaches looking for talent for their teams. Hugo is already signed to a team but went to the Combine to be seen and to get up to speed (literally) at the Junior level of play-he’s 17 playing with 19/20 year olds. Hugo made an impression with coaches and scouts, many of whom were sorry to hear that he was already signed to a contract with an EHL team. His Combine team won the Combine championship with Hugo contributing 3 points-1 goal / 2 primary assists-of his team’s 10 goals in the tournament.

In any event, I spent a lot of time in the rink, in the hotel, and in a great Irish pub. However, while I was away from home, our neighbor’s house, along with 3 vehicles, burnt to the ground (picture made by the wife from our front porch). The wife discovered the fire and called 911. The family was away on vacation so there was no loss of human life but their 3 dogs perished in the fire.

# 6046-48 / around the house ~ toilets that don't need to flush

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It’s not what you look at that matters, it’s what you see.” ~ Henry David Thoreau

SPENT ALL OF TUESDAY AND PART OF WEDNESDAY-36 HOURS-without electricity and, consequently, without heat. All due to a freakish Spring snowstorm which dropped a foot or more of very heavy, wet snow. Throw in a bit of wind and trees, tree limbs, and power lines were down all over the place.

I had no internet access, my laptop battery was dead, my iPad was about to be dead, and I put my iPhone in the low-power mode in order to have cell service for the duration. Cuz the iPad was sinking fast, I could not read the book I was in the process of reading. So, I spent a fair amount of time sitting on the made bed-the position from which I made today’s pictures-reading…gasp… real books that were made out of paper and such.

The books were photo books with text-interviews, photo critiques, and photo theory. I came across some interesting quotes. Consider this from Robert Adams, re: the notion of what is art?…

“…Few people will venture now to try to say, even in the broadest terms, what art is, and thus there is no way to set standards for success. If everything a so-called artist makes is art, then, as some wit has observed, pencils don’t need erasers and toilets that don’t need to flush…”

In any event, I am off to New England-near Boston-today for 3 days of hockey. Will be making pictures and posts.

# 6044-45 / landscape (civilized ku)•around the house ~ to illustrate and illuminate

What we hope for from the artist is help in discovering the significance of a place. In this sense we would choose in most respects for thirty minutes with Edward Hopper’s painting Sunday Morning to thirty minutes on the street that was his subject; with Hopper’s vision we see more. “ ~ Robert Adams

I HAVE ALWAYS FOUND IT ANNOYING WHEN I READ A COMMENT that, in one fashion or another, links photography to painting. Re: Robert Adams’ statement - don’t know why he, a photographer, would use a painter’s work to illustrate a point that could be made equally well by using a photographer’s work to make the same point. As an example….

What we hope for from the artist is help in discovering the significance of a place. In this sense we would choose in most respects for thirty minutes with Stephen Shore’s photograph Beverly Boulevard and LaBrea Avenue to thirty minutes on the street that was his subject; with Shore’s vision we see more. - Robert Adams

That written, the point of this entry is not to belabor Adams’ choice of an artist’s work to make his point. Rather my point in this entry is to comment on Adam’s’ point.

Throughout the course of my picture making life, increasingly so as I have aged, is an awareness of the fact that I am very frequently unable to “be fully in the moment” when making a picture. That is, to be more exact , that, when I encounter something that pricks my eye and sensibilities, my reaction is to make a picture as opposed to “being in the moment”, i.e. pausing to contemplate and appreciate that which caught my attention. In most cases, I make a picture and move on.

It is only when I have in hand the result of a picture making moment-a print-that I am able to more fully contemplate and appreciate what it was that pricked my eye and sensibilities in the picture making moment. And, it is worth noting that I can can contemplate and appreciate the depiction / representation-if not the actuality-of what I pictured for an extended period of time over an extended period of time (that is, time and time again).

In other words, I would choose in most respects for thirty minutes with one of my photographs to thirty minutes in the place where I viewed my subject; with the printed manifestation of my vision I see more.

I attribute my manner of delayed contemplation and appreciation to the fact that the medium of photography and its apparatus extract a precise moment in time-described and defined by a precise frame imposed by the picture maker-from the on-going flow of time. That moment is isolated, aka: “frozen”, on the 2D surface of a photographic print where it can contemplated and appreciated for as long as a viewer chooses to view it, without the “distraction” of the flow of time.

FYI, while my contemplation and appreciation of my pictures-and those made by others-are influenced by my appreciation of the form found in a picture, a visual experience, I also appreciate the potential derivation to be had of the feeling of being there. That is, the feeling of pleasure and surprise of discovering subtle beauty in the most simple and unlikely places and things.

# 6041-43 / around the house•kitchen sink ~ the small and the unexpected

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If photography is about anything it is the deep surprise of living in the ordinary world. By virtue of walking through the fields and streets of this planet, focusing on the small and the unexpected, conferring attention on the helter-skelter juxtapositions of time and space, the photographer reminds us that the actual world is full of surprise, which is precisely that most people, imprisoned in habit and devoted to the familiar, tend to forget.“ ~ John Rosenthal

# 6040 / landscape (ku) ~ in this moment

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WENT TO THE PHARMACY TO PICK UP SOME MEDS. ALONG THE WAY I stopped at The Flume-along the Au Sable River West Branch-to check out the Spring runoff. No thunder but it was moving along quite nicely with high volume (water and sound). That written, 10 days ago the rocks in the river would have been under water.

That written….

“No one moment is most important. Any moment can be something.” ~ Garry Winogrand

# 6034-39 / landscape (ku) ~ just another day in the 'dacks

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YESTERDAY AFTERNOON, ON THE WAY TO DINNER, I STOPPED at Buttermilk Falls-on the Raquette River-to check out the spring runoff. The falls, which is really more of a rapids with a significant drop over its span of about 100 meters-was in a fine fury and sounded like thunder as I approached it through the forest.

I pictured the falls as I walked it from top to bottom. The result is presented above in 2 formats - a long horizontal which is how I will print it-6 ft in length-(but may be difficult to view online) and stacked (which might be easier to view on line).

On a side note, one landscape / nature picture making cliche I detest is the very common technique of picturing moving water with a slow shutter speed which renders the water with a fuzzy, diaphanous, cloud-like effect. A practice which hearkens back to the early days of photography when picture makers were using very slow plates, film (or whatever light-sensitive material) which necessitated very slow shutter speeds.

This annoys me cuz it, iMo, “emasculates” the power of moving water, even the water in a gently flowing stream. It might be just me, but I simply do not get it.

FYI, before I left for dinner, I manage to make yet another kitchen sink picture.

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# 6029-33 / roadside springtime ~ invisible to the naked eye

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We walk by wonders every day and don't see them. We only stop at what shouts the loudest. “ ~ Barbara Bordnick

I AM CURRENTLY WORKING ON CREATING A NEW BODY OF WORK, roadside springtime.

Unlike, as Barbara Bordnick wrote, a referent that “shouts the loudest”, the referents in these pictures do not shout at all. If they utter a sound, it is most likely a whisper. And cuz they whisper, most people just drive by-not walk by-them along the roadside.

One of my intents in the making of these pictures is to make visible some things that most people do not see.

# 6027-28 / civilized ku•the new snapshot ~ I meant nothing by it

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“... I was aware that I was imposing an organization that came from me and from what I had learned: it was not really an outgrowth of the scene in front of me ... I asked myself if I could organize the information I wanted to include without relying on an overriding structural principle ... Could I structure the picture in such a way that communicated my experience of standing there, taking in the scene in front of me?” ~ Stephen Shore

WENT TO SARATOGA SPRINGS FOR DINNER WITH FAMILY. While there I tried to make a few pictures which communicated my experience of being there, taking in the scene in front of me without relying on an overriding structural principle.