# 6502-04 / seeing red • common places • common things ~ united diversity

OVER THE COURSE OF MY PICTURE MAKING YEARS I have been accused, or at least it has been “suggested”, of being obsessed with the color red. The actual fact of the matter is that I do use the color red-when I see it-as visual element in many of my pictures. However, yet another fact of the matter is that I have never sought out or specifically look for the color red.

I don’t have to have a single point of emphasis in the picture. It can be complex, because it’s so detailed that the viewer can take time and read it, and look at something here, and look at something there, and they can pay attention to a lot more.” ~ Stephen Shore

Like Shore, I make visually complex pictures for the same reason he seems to do so; pictures that are “so detailed that the viewer can take time and read it, and look at something here, and look at something there, and they can pay attention to a lot more.” In my own words, my pictures tend to evince, as a result of their complexity, a high degree of visual energy as seen across the field of a print. iMo, there is very little better than a splash of some repetitive visual element or another in a picture to get a viewer’s eye moving around that picture.

The screenshot included in this entry is used to illustrate another aspect of my use of the color red. That is, to my eye and sensibilities, I find it is quite interesting and somewhat surprising how the same visual element, when shared across a referent-diverse group of pictures can hold that seemingly disparate group together as a coherent body of work.

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

seeing red ~ (embiggenable) • µ4/3

(embiggenable) • µ4/3

(embiggenable) • µ4/3

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.

# 5581 / around the house•seeing red (1-5) ~ why are all our cars black?

there is nothing on tv ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

seeing red ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

seeing red ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

seeing red ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

seeing red ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

FYI, I HAVE UNDERTAKEN A PROJECT TO UPDATE, REORGANIZE and SLIM DOWN my site's WORK page. While I have begun to update a few bodies of work, I have yet to settle on a manner of presentation and, just as important, to decide which bodies of work I might eliminate.

In any event, today's entry contains a few pictures from my seeing red work. Pictures which have not been previously displayed as part of that body of work. And, in culling through my picture library I have been surprised by the number of new candidates for inclusion in the seeing red body of work. I have also been surprised by the number of different picture making situations-urban / natural world landscapes, kitchen sink, people, still life-in which I have seen and made pictures of "red". And, I do find it a bit strange that there is no other color around which I could build a similar body of work.