rink shrub/grasses ~ Cardinal, ONT. CA. • (embiggenable)
rink shrub/grasses picture made with a "real" camera. All other made with the iPhone 7 Plus camera module.
rink shrub/grasses ~ Cardinal, ONT. CA. • (embiggenable)
rink shrub/grasses picture made with a "real" camera. All other made with the iPhone 7 Plus camera module.
sundown / Rist Camp ~ Newcomb,NY • in the Adirondack PARK (embiggenable)
painted roadside erratic
sunlight in sink
sunlight on wall thru old rolled glass
surveying the hunting grounds
The computer is all set up and I am catching up on creating my end of some PHOTOGRAPHS IN CONVERSATION for submission to a LENSCRATCH online exhibition. It's fun stuff and I'll most likely try to continue having "conversations" after the exhibition exercise is finished.
Anyone intersted in having some "conversations"?
all pictures made with iPhone 7 Plus camera module.
into the lake ~ Fern Lake • in the Adirondack PARK (embiggenable)
hotel stay ~ Canton, MA. (embiggenable)
The written, it should be noted that I have lots of old snapshots made by father of family and friends made while he and my mother were in the Adirondacks on vacation stays. So, it's very fitting and a the-circle-is-complete kinda thing that I am now engaged in the very same snapshot activity which makes, for me, a very interesting and emotional connection to my dad.
hair pick • (embiggenable)
weekend boat cruise ~ Fern Lake - in the Adirondack PARK (embiggenable)
However, a few days ago, I was curious about the iPhone 7 sensor size inasmuch as, whatever size it is, it makes damn good pictures. So, I asked Google the question and it took me to a forum on DPReview on which I found out what size it is (small) and I landed smack dab in the middle of a a very long string of comments, re: the sensor and the phone itself.
The comments revolved around: a) the sensor sucks, b) so do the pictures it makes, c) Apple sucks, d) Apple shoulda ..., e) Apple didn't ... and the like. Of couse, opposing opinions, re: the mentioned, were in no short supply. The string went on and on. Ideas and insults were exchanged in relatively equal measure.
Needless to write, I bailed after a relatively short perusal of the, iMo, inane and senseless nattering.
As I have written and stated on many previous occasions, I will never be able to comprehend the obsession so many picture makers have with the techincal aspects of picture making gear. And, as I have also written and stated, because of that obsession, the worst audience to show one's pictures to are "serious" picture makers. They seem intrinsically unable to look at a picture without gear and technique thoughts dancing in their heads like a swarm of nasty bees.
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I was experimenting with different border treatments while operating under the assumption that I needed to find the "perfect" border and then would use that border for all of my the new snapshot pictures. However, when I was making a few 16-picture assemblage prints, I made 1 print where I mixed pictures with different borders - #s 2,3,4. I very much liked the result because it was less regimented in appearance. And .... it occurred to me (duh) that traditional snapshots were made with all kinds of camera formats so it made perfect sense to use different border types.
With that issue put to bed, I started to ruminate on the manner in which I would make prints for wall display (home, gallery, etc.). I eventually came to the conclusion that, since most modern snapshots are made and displayed on digital devices, the best way to present them - no matter which border they have - was to picture them on a screen of one kind or another. The cell phone being the most common display device, I decided to experiment with making a picture of a picture on the cell phone screen.
All of which led to another question ... on what kind of background would the cell phone sit? The anwer to that question is seen in the top most picture in this entry. I find the empty frame to be the perfect counterpoint to picture display on screen vs. as a print in a frame.
More's the pity that so few pictures made with a cell phone will ever see the light of day as a printed picture.
morning light # 2 ~ made with a "real" camera (embiggenable)
morning light # 1 ~ made with iPhone camera module (embiggenable)
evening light ~ made withiPhone camera module (embiggenable)
Your photography is a record of your living, for anyone who really sees. ~ Paul Strand
unintentional picture (embiggenable)
Sophie ~ Stone Harbor, NJ (embiggenable)
The genesis of my recent awakening is to be found in the book, The Art of the American Snapshot ~ 1888-1978. Specifically in the following excerpt regarding the 1944 MOMA exhibition, The American Snapshot:
.... the pictures "constitute[d] the most vital, most dynamic, most interesting and worthwhile photographic exhibition ever assembled by the Museum of Modern Art" .... [P]raised as being "without artistc pretensions" and coming "nearer to achieving the stature of true art than any of the inbred preciosities in the museum's permanent collection of in any of its previous shows," the photographs were applauded as "honest, realistic, human and articulate."
When first reading these words, within the context of the snapshots presented in the book, I had absolutely no qualms accepting the idea of the pictures being "vital, dynamic, interesting, honest, realistic, human and articulate". And, I was especially taken with the notion that the pictures were made "without artistic pretensions."
The concept of making pictures "without artistic pretensions" struck a chord with me inasmuch as, for the past decade-and-a-half, I have been making pictures with artistic intentions, if not pretensions. However, that written, I do believe that those pictures are "vital, dynamic, interesting, honest, realistic, human and articulate". And, without question, many others think so as well.
All of that written, I have been acutely aware that there was a hole in the fabric of my picturing repertoire ... while my picture making was all nearly totally spontaneous, my referents were almost exclusively places and things. With very few exceptions, people as referents were not part of my artistic intentions picture making.
Consequently, I was aware that, if I wanted to create snapshots which mimiced the Traditional American Snapshot, picturing people must be the primary instigator for making snapshots. Faced with an upcoming extended family vacation at the Jersey Shore - the wife has asserted it is all about family and not so much the place - I had the opportunity to get people-based picturing into my head. Needless to write, it was not a particularly difficult paradigm to adopt. Although ....
.... try as I might, I have been unable to shed my artistic intentions picture making M.O. I am not certain that shedding it is a requirement for making snapshots - it just has to look like the pictures were made without artistic pretentions.
More on that topic to come.