civilized ku # 3586 ~ it's not too fine a point

(embiggenable) • iPhone

(embiggenable) • iPhone

WHY TOOTHPICKS? Answer: Why not? WHY ICICLES? Answer: Why not?

A point in every direction is the same as no point at all.

Or so said the Pointless Man when encountered by Oblio and his dog, Arrow, in the Pointless Forest. The comment could have been directed at my discursively promiscuous picture making ... since I point my picture making devices in every direction, does that mean I have no point at all?

AN ASIDE: the following are random comments gleaned, during my on-point research, from random online sources, all strung together in no particular order. END OF ASIDE

All this begs the question of what it is that makes the photographer. What makes a photographer great, or influential? Which parts of the process are inherent, and which can be dispensed with, without losing that essence of greatness? I maintain that it is, essentially, the singular vision. What she is lacking is any singular vision. She's simply shooting everything, anything, that catches her eye as interesting. What we are looking at here, almost certainly, is a modestly talented vernacular photographer. She has no particular vision, because she doesn't need one, there's no evidence that she was remotely interested in any such thing. Why the hell can't we let this woman be what so she obviously was, a woman with a camera who took pleasure in photographing things, lots of things? Vernacular photography includes pictures by amateur makers, studio practitioners, itinerant and press photographers–many whom work unconcerned with the medium’s fine art applications. Snapshots capturing everyday life and subjects are a major form of vernacular photography.

AN ASIDE: the following is part of a comment (left on a previous enrty) by THOMAS RINK. END OF ASIDE

I received your book this week and enjoyed it a lot. The pictures look very spontaneous - almost vernacular - but your command over colors and composition reveals that they are products of conscious effort. Very well done indeed. You recently mentioned that you don't work in terms in projects, but photograph what you find visually arresting ('discursive promiscuity' in your terms). On the other hand, I believe it is this spontaneous character, of effortless beauty, which keeps the pictures in the book together.

So, dispite what the Pointless Man said, the Rockman later told Oblio and his dog, Arrow, that:

You don't need to have a point, to have a point.

This conclusion was based, in part, upon the observation of the 3 Dancing Fat Sisters who were so rotund that they didn't have an obvious visual point. Nevertheless, they did have a point-laughter and merriment-which their actions quite obviously expressed.

At this point, some might think that this entry is rather pointless. So, let me make my point ...

Based upon the fact that straight pictures-and mine in particular-seem to be so relentlessly literial-that is, pictures which seem to be only about what is so clearly / accurately depicted-many viewers see only the referent and find nothing more to "see". And, given the fact of my roving picture making eye, many viewers are inclined to ask, re: my pictures, "What's the point?"

In answer to that question, perhaps I should create an all-purpose Artist Statement derived from Thomas Rink's comment. Something like:

My pictures look very spontaneous-almost vernacular-but my attention to color and the orginization of visual elements on the 2D surface of the print reveals that they are products of a conscious effort. I don't work in terms in projects, but rather, I photograph what I find visually arresting (discursively promiscuous picture making). On the other hand, I believe it is this spontaneous character, of effortless beauty, which keeps my pictures together as all of a single piece. Or, as all of a single vision / way of seeing.

civilized ku # 3583-85 ~ let it be what it is

all pictures ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

I HAVE ALWAYS BELIEVED THAT THE PRIMARY CHARACTERISTIC of the Medium of Photography and Its Apparatus which most distinguishes it from the other visual arts is its intrinsic relationship with the real. Or in simple terms, its ability to record the real world in a manner which is a very accurate representation of that world (emphasis on the word "representation"). That written, because of that belief, I make pictures of the real world-using the medium and its apparatus-with the intent of those pictures being as accurate a representation of the real world as the medium and its apparatus are capable of achieving .... a picture making practice which is often labeled as straight photography.

While I believe that unique charateristic is the medium and its apparatus' greatest asset / strength, I believe that it is also its greatest impediment / weakness, re: the medium and its appparatus' accceptance as an art (as opposed to a craft). Consider the oft heard comment, anyone can take a picture, or, the ever popular, it's "just" a picture of (insert referent discription here).

I certainly believe there is a difference between taking a picture and making a picture. However, I do believe that a picture is, indeed, just a picture ....

.... that is to write, to my eye and sensibilities, a picture is not a document to be read, a picture is not an interpretation to be deciphered, and (amongst many other things it is not), a picture is not-other than pure propaganda-capable of having a fixed / singular meaning.

I understand that a picture-and the making thereof-can be / mean anything anyone wants it to be / mean. I believe that to be true of all of the visual arts. However, to my eye and sensibilities, a picture and/or any other visual arts object is a thing to be enjoyed in and of itself. A thing which tempts and teases my visual sensory apparatus. A thing which I want to feel as opposed to a thing I want to think about. A thing I want to look at and feel something.

Or, when looking at pictures (or any art), I want to experience, as Susan Sontag wrote: ....

.... the luminousness of the thing in itself, of things being what they are.

All of that written, the thing that caused me to write this entry can be found here. And, I swear to you, if I had to follow this prescription to look at pictures, I would never make or look at a picture again.

ku #1460 / civilized ku # 3581-82 ~ vive la (non) différence

winter ~ all pictures (embigennable)• iPhone

THERE IS NO DENYING IT NOW, I am an iPhone Photographer. That is a true statement inasmuch as, over the past year, I have rarely used a "real" camera to make my "serious" / "art" pictures. However, that written, it is also a true statement to write that nothing has changed, re: my vision, AKA: how I see and what I see and picture.

I have come to this conclusion-that I am an iPhone photographer (and always have been)-as a result of my attempt to search out and find / define a unique unto itself iPhone picture making aesthetic. That is, a unifying concept of iPhone picture making that goes beyond the mere fact that a picture was made using an iPhone.

Finding and identifying an iPhone picture making aesthetic is sorta like looking for a needle in a haystack. Beyond question, there are more pictures being made with an iPhone (and other similar devices) than are being made with any other kind of picture making device. As a matter of fact, I would go as far to write that if you were to lump all of pictures made last year with "real" cameras into a single basket, that number would be a mere fraction of the pictures made last year with an iPhone or other similar device.

However, that premise begs the question, how many of those iPhone made pictures were made with "serious" picture making intentions. My answer to that question is that the number of "serious" picture makers in the iPhone ranks is most likey a small fraction thereof. So, finding clusters of "serious" iPhone pictures-clusters which could help define an "serious" iPhone aesthetic-ain't the easiest thing to do.

Nevertheless, there is one such cluster, the IPPAWARDS site, which is a site / organization which sponsors the preeminent annual (since 2008) iPhone competition. In fact, it is the site on which I discovered, 3-4 years ago, that some really good pictures were being made with the use of an iPhone. And, it was upon revisiting this site, that I discovered what I was searching for - a genine iPhone aesthetic ....

.... an aethethic which caused me to realize that I have always been an iPhone photographer. That is, since the day I began makng pictures back in 1968.

Since I starting making pictures, I have always been keen about the idea of making the mechanics of making a picture as simple as possible so that the path between seeing and the making of a picture of what I see is as simple and direct as possible. Hence, for my personal work, I have been a practioner of the 1 camera / lens / year school of picture making. Except, of course, I modified that idea to a 1 camera / lens / forever picture making methodology. I also threw a 1 f-stop setting into to the mix so that I had little other than shutter speed and focus to consider when making a picture.

So, for me and how I picture, the iPhone is a near perfect device inasmuch as it requires very little input in order to make a picture. It is as good as a direct from eye to image file picture making device can get, which is the result of the fact that the device does almost all of the "thinking". And, for my very intuitive and spontaneous picture making methodology, it is a match made in picture making heaven.

All that written, what, iMo, is the iPhone aesthetic? As I see it, the iPhone's ease of use has "allowed people to capture meaningful moments spontaneously" (according to NEWSWEEK). That is, pictures which "come from a very personal place, with less technical experimentation and more focus on moments, emotions and stories" (according to Kenan Aktulun, who created IPPAWARD). Pictures which are, iMo, honest, realistic, human, articulate, without artistic pretensions and closer to the stature of true art than any of the inbred preciosites eminating from many of the staid and stale "traditional" picture making genres.

To be certain, that aesthetic is but one variant to be found in the iPhone picture making world. However, it's the one to which I subscribe and the one I have always subscribed to in my picture making life.

civilized ku # 3580 / art reflects ~ book 'em Dan-o

(embiggenable) • iPhone

all book spreads~ (embiggenable) • µ4/3

I HAVE MADE A NEW PHOTO BOOK, ART REFLECTS, on blurb (see it here). There are several reasons for making this book ... 1) my only copy of this book was stolen (high flattery), 2) as previously mentioned, I want to test a different blurb paper.

AN ASIDE: The pictures for ART REFLECTS were made on a single street in Old Montreal. They are single exposures, not double exposures, of art in gallery window displays made with a single click of the shutter release. The reflections are of the buildings on opposite side of the street. HINT - works best on a narrow street on an overcast day. END OF ASIDE

WHY I MAKE PHOTO BOOKS AND why you should too.

Best as I can tell, there are 55 photo books-of my pictures-in bookcases and on table tops in my house. They are divided into 2 main categories. Most are photo books of my separate bodies of fine art pictures. The balance are photo books of our travels / vactions.

In my pursuit of exhibitions of my fine art work, the fine art photo books can be used as porfolio-like (the printed quality is that good) submissions to galleries and art centers. For some exhibitions, I print 5 "special editions", signed and numbered, of the exhibition pictures and offer them as exhibition "catalogs". And, on occasion, I pick up one the books just to re-acquaint myself with my work.

The vacation / travels photo books function just like a family photo album. As such, for the wife and I, they preserve fond memories and experiences. And, in the case of travels with my grandson (primarily our annual grandpa / grandson Spring break trips), a duplicate book is made for him.

While these photo books serve many functions and provide much pleasure during my lifetime, one of the most significant reasons for their making is for posterity. That is, after I am dead and gone. I think of these books as an undertaking to save my family the daunting effort of sorting through my thousands of pictures in order to assemble a legacy of my picture making activities.

All of that written, the other significant reason for the making of these books is that, plain and simple, I like looking at my pictures in printed form. In fact, I like looking at any pictures in printed form. That's why I have at least an equal number of photo books of other picture maker's work. iMo, if it ain't in print form, it ain't a photograph.

So, my question to you is this .... why don't you make photo books? Or, do you?

I would love to read the answer to either of those questions if you would be so kind as to leave a comment on this entry.

civilized ku # 3579 / polaroid (simulated) # 51-52 ~ stop making sense

all pictures ~ (embiggenable) • iPhone

AN ASIDE: HAD PROMISED A FEW ENTRIES AGO that my next entry would be about why I make photo books. That didn't happen and this entry continues down along that broken promise path. I'm thinking maybe the next entry is it. END OF ASIDE

ONE OF THE THINGS ABOUT THE MEDIUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY AND ITS APARATUS that I have been wondering about is, who the hell is to blame for the use of the medium and its aparatus, primarily in the fine art world, as a psuedo-psychoanalytical instrument for narcistic navel gazing and intellectual masturbatory "investigations" of societal / cultural phenomena? Or, when did a photograph cease to be a thing to be "simply" looked at and "enjoyed" for its visual / referent(ial) appeal? When did a photograph become a thing to be "understood"?

And, by extension, is a person who values the medium and it aparatus, both for its picture making capabilities and the viewing of the results thereof, for its visual manifestations rather than its intellectualization constructs guilty of being a simpleton?

Just wondering.

ku # 1457-59 ~ it's all a matter of taste

birch tree under a full moon ~ (embiggenable) • µ4/3

NYC ~ (embiggenable) • µ4/3

Scotland ~ (embiggenable) • µ4/3

IN A RECENT ENTRY I WROTE ABOUT the digital picture making era embrace of / return to Pictorialism. A trend which has been especially evident in the arena of calls for submissions for juried group exhibitions. At least, in my experience, with the galleries to which I submit pictures. And I am beginning to think that it is waste of my time and money to continue to submit to such calls for submission.

One such recent call for submissions is for a juried group exhibition at the PhotoPlace Gallery in Middlebury, Vermont. The theme for the exhibition is TREES

Fortunately for me, that is a theme for which I have plenty of submission possibilities. After all, I live in a 6.1 million acre forest preserve. Unfortunately for me, the juror for the exhibition could accurately be labeled as a practicing Pictorialist.

A statement, re: the juror's work on her site, states that she a visual artist (not a photographer) who creates art which ...

... preserves vanishing beauty in our vulnerable environment.

to which I call "bullshit".

There is no doubt that there is plenty of "vanishing beauty in our vulnerable environment". However, the work produced by this artist does not depict the actual reality based beauty to be found and seen in our vunerable environment. What is actually depicted in the work is a fanciful-existing only in the imagination or fancy; overimaginative and unrealistic-"interpretation" of the beauty to experienced in the world of nature.

Sure, sure, it's all poetic, touchy-feely and stuff-and there is nothing wrong with that-but, if one wants to promote the perservation of the beauty in our vulnerable environment, then show us the reality of that envirnoment. Stop telling us that you want to perserve something that does not actually exist.

All of that written, my point is simple. Submitting my straight tree pictures to that themed exhibition to be judged by that juror is, most likey, an exercise in futility, re: acceptance into the exhibition.

AN ASIDE This entry should not be considered to be a critcism of the exhibition juror. She will select those pictures which prick her eye and sensibilities. Pictures which are biased toward her personal taste. Which is the way such things work ...

... take it from me, someone who has been a judge for many a picture "competition" / exhibition, including being 1 of 3 judges for the final round of the KODAK International Newspaper Snapshot Competition. A competition for which I sucessfully persuaded the other judges that my personal taste was the correct one with which to determine the grand prize winner.

civilized ku # 3578 ~ The mystery of the world is the visible

(embiggenable) • iPhone

IN YESTERDAY'S ENTRY GARET MUNGER wrote:

"I would, if I may, disagree with your conclusion and your encouragement to "get on with the act of seeing what you want to see". It may be a fine point but I would be concerned if you go about looking for what you want to see, there is a risk that you will miss an awful lot of what there is to see and react to. One manner of reacting is using a camera to make a selection from all the possibilities in front of you, of just part to make into a picture.

Peter Turnley writes and is quoted in today's (January 1, 2020) TOP blog: "In the midst of all of this—among the daily blessings and joys that offer so much amazing life in the present moment—is the opportunity to go out, and use one's eyes, heart, movement, and presence to not only see, but to feel, and respond by registering with a camera, our very personal now.
"

my response: First, let me write a grateful thanks to Garet for the comment. Makes me feel like someone's reading this blog. And, as a general rule, my postion on that is the more comments the merrier.

AN ASIDE Garet wrote, "I would, if I may, disagree..." NOTE TO ALL: no permission needed to disagree with my thoughts and opinions. The only requirement is to disagree with civility. Ad hominen comments will be deleted. END OF ASIDE

I agree with Garet, re: about going out and about, when making pictures, with eyes and mind wide open simply because there is so much to see. However, in yesterday's entry I was writing about looking at pictures. That written, when I am looking at pictures, I do so with the same open eyes and mind. We are in complete agreement in either case.

So, perhaps I should have been more definitive, re: my get on with the act of seeing what you want to see statement. I could have been more defintive if I had just wrote, get on with the act of seeing END OF SENTENCE.

Or, in other words, just look at any given picture-I was writing about viewing, not making, pictures-with an open mind and listen to what your gut feeling tells you .... or as I am forever writing / saying, see if a given picture pricks your eye and sensitivities. However, therein is a "problem".

Photographs are a visual art form. A photograph is meant to be seen, aka: a visual experience. And, like all art (at least iMo), good art is meant to be affective-dictionary definition: to touch the feelings of (someone); move emotionally*.

Hence, the problem .... even with a so-called "open mind", not everyone is affected in the same manner when confronted with the same stimulus. They draw / experience their own conclusions. Inasmuch as most art afficionados are drawn to art which stimulates their own personal "tastes"-in my words, that which pricks their own very personal eye and sensibilities-they do, in fact (consciously or sub-consciously), see what they want to see.

ANOTHER ASIDE Perhaps the word "want" is the wrong word. Maybe the words "compelled" or "driven" might be better. As in, what they are compelled / driven to see by their inner voice, aka: vision.END OF ASIDE

That written, it should not be understood to mean that an art afficionado does not seek out new and/or unexpected pleasures. In fact, he/she does. In a very real sense, he/she is always looking for the next big thing. Or, at the very least, the next big thing for him/her-self even if it only pricks his/her eye and sensibilities.

Dn't know if this entry clarifies are muddies my previous entry. Feel free to let me know either way.

*can good art affect the intellect as well as the emotions? My only answer to that question is to suggest that you read Susan Sontag's essay, Against Interpretion and decide for yourself. You might also keep in mind the words of Oscar Wilde:

"The mystery of the world is the visible, not the invisible."

Which I read to mean that, when viewing a picture, the mystery is the visible, aka: the picture itself and how it makes you feel, and not the invisible, aka: the interpretation thereof and what it makes you think the picture is about.

civilized ku # 3577 ~ on blurbing

(embiggenable) • iPhone

HAVING JUST MADE AND "PUBLISHED" MY first blurb book, I have a few thoughts on the subject.

At the top of my thoughts list, let me write that, after receiving the book, it is a good quality product. Is it the best online sourced printed photo book quality I have seen? No, it is not. While the color is spot on correct, the printing is a little bit light with the black ink. Although, only ever so slightly noticeable on pictures with large areas of dark tonal values when viewed under bright light. Nevertheless, overall it is a good quality piece.

CAVEAT: I did not choose blurb's best paper for this book. It is very possible that the paper I chose is the reason that the black ink appears to be a bit on the light side. To find out the answer to that possibity, I will re-order the book using blurb's best paper. It is also worth noting that the covers-printed on a heavy gloss paper (almost a card weight stock) look excellent. END CAVEAT

Even if my next blurb "test" photo book with their best paper turns out to be of excellent quality, blurb will not be my online POD (print on demand) source. That will not be because of quality, it will be based on my opinion that the only reason for me to use blurb is if I want to "publish" a book using their store as my distribution point. Otherwise, I will stick to my tried and true source.

You may have noticed that I put the word published in quotes. That's because so-called publishing in blurb's store is, iMo, bound to be a rather fruitless endevour.

My reasoning for that conclusion is actually quite simple. If you were to go to blurb's bookstore and select the section for photography, you would link to a section with, as of this AM, 114,193 books. Imagine walking into an actual bookstore (devoted to photography) and encountering 114,193 books. Now imagine that the books are displayed on one shelf that is 114,193 books long. And if that is not enough to discourage browsing, imagine that the books are displayed 1 thru 114,193 based on the date published. In effect, that's what the blurb bookstore is.

My book, which was on the first page on the day it was "published", is slowly, but surely, sinking into the abyss. As are all the books "published" on that date. Eventually, they will end up well beyond the browsing endurance range of most users. While you can search for books by the author's name, that's no help at all if one is just wanting to see what's out there with the idea of finding something new.

If I wanted to go all in on the blurb bookstore, I could blurb print and publish photobooks for some of the picture categories on the WORK page on my site. Then post a link to that book on each of my category gallery pages. If I were to do so, I might sell a few books but the real "winner" in that endevour would be blurb inasmuch as to sell a book on blurb you need to print and buy a book on blurb.

Which is exactly how a vanity press operates.

In my next entry, I'll explain why I make photo books and why I think every picture maker should make photo books.