civilized ku # 4082 / picture windows # 72 ~ makes me wonder

neon / window grate ~ Manhattan / NYC, NY (click to embiggen)

gallery doors ~ Manhattan / NYC, NY (c;ice to embiggen)

There has been a movement afoot, re: the increased use of photo effects / manipulation, for quite some time - roughly begun with the advent of the digital / computer based picture making as opposed to film / darkroom based picture making. Not that weren't pictures made with obvious effects / manipulation, act of the imagination if you will. It's just that making such pictures in the digital darkroom is much more easily done and with nearly endless possibilities.

Is this trend a bad thing? No, but it does, to my eye and sensibilities, get a bit tiring / over done at times.

However, truth be told, I do venture into the realm of making pictures which evidence an "effect" (of sorts). Although ... those pictures do not rely upon digital darkroom applied effects. Rather they come straight out of my camera(s) - no post-picturing effects applied - by the time-honored use of a pinhole lens which, iMo, qualifies them as a straight photography variant.

Of course, I, as I do to all of my pictures, apply a border frame (which in no way alters the picture content). I do so as a photo vernacular function to emphasis the act of framing, of separating the picture's content from the world around it. A device I would categorize as more of an affectation rather than an effect.

In any event, as an example of my increase in photo effects / manipulation premise, I would offer up for your consideration the juried results of the PhotoPlace Gallery exhibition, Still Life: The Ordinary Made Extraordinary. My accepted picture rather dramatically stands apart from most of the accepted pictures as an example of a "classic" still life picture. To a certain extent, it makes wonder why / how it was accepted.

The foregoing commentary should not be considered to be critical of pictures with effects / manipulations applied. In and of itself, that practice is a time-honored part of the picture making tradition. However, that written, 2 points: many juried photo exhibitions are dominated by such pictures, and, it does make me wonder just a bit if the rise in such picture making is due to the fact that the art of making straight pictures, which depends entirely upon the act of seeing, is becoming a lost art.

FYI, more tomorrow on the exhibit's juror's statement: "...I wanted to include images that had some magic and spontaneity — images that are poetic and playful, and not so carefully considered or contrived.

civilized ku # 4080-81 ~ me and my shadow

me and my shadow ~ Manhattan / NYC, NY (click to embiggen)

wall art • inside / outside ~ Manahattan / NYC, NY (click to embiggen)

Last week I wrote that I would re-process and re-post pictures I made on my recent travels. Pictures which were processed the fly on my iPad with PS Express. In case you haven't noticed, those re-processed picture scan be viewed in the 6 DAYS gallery on my WORK page.

One of the pictures - me and my shadow - which benefitted most with the re-processing is displayed above in this entry. With more control over the elements which appear in the shadow areas of the picture, it is much more obvious that my shadow depicts that there is a camera held up to my face. That added definition / clarity makes my shadow a much more important visual element than it was in the previous on-the-fly processed picture.

In fact, I like this picture so much that it is now designated as my official portrait.

single women # 35 / picture windows # 71 / art reflects # 32 ~ 6 days and nights

While in Mahattan during my recent 7 days travels, I discovered - at the Aperture Foundation gallery - a delightful little (5x8") book, Office Romance by Kathy Ryan. (see some pictures HERE)

No, it is not a romance novel but rather a collection of 154 iPhone pictures (4x4") which depict the same number of referents as seen by Kathy Ryan her place of work - the New York Times Building in MYC. According to Ryan ...

This began when I saw a bolt of light zigzag across the stairs one afternoon at The New York Times Magazine. I pulled out my iPhone and took a picture of it. Then I started seeing pictures all the time - incredible beauty and poetry in my office. It got my heart racing. When I see a certain kind of light out of the corner of my eye during the workday, or somebody us illuminated in an unsusaul way, I take a few pictures. It's a compulsion. Making pictures has become a call-and-response to the light and the day.

Inasmuch as I am a "call-and-response" (to quotidian referents / experiences) compulsive picture maker and a fan of small / precious pictures / photo books, Ryan's book gave me the idea of creating a small book (6x6" with 4x4" pictures) of my pictures which were made over the course of my recent 7-day travels. A diarist approach to presenting those pictures.

See the pictures.

Fyi, during the 6 day period I was able to add 1 single women, 2 picture windows and 3 art reflects pictures to their respective bodies of work. Although, the art reflects pictures will be the start of a sub-category within the art reflects body of work inasmuch as the manner in which the art is displayed through the gallery windows and the reflected architecture in those windows is decidedly different from that which is depicted in the current collection.

civilized ku # 4077-79 / art reflects # 31 ~ gone to the dogs

gone to the dogs ~ Manhattan / NYC,NY (click to embiggen)

art reflects ~ Manhattan / NYC, NY (click to embiggen)

art reflects ~ Manhattan / NYC, NY (click to embiggen)

McSorley's Old Ale House ~ Manhattan / NYC, NY (click to embiggen)

McSorley's Old Ale House interior ~ Manhattan / NYC, NY (click to embiggen)

Headed home today and will have more NYC pictures to post.

All pictures posted on this trip were processed on my iPad with Photoshop Express and edited (vignette and frame)with Snapseed. All will be re-processed at home with my normal workflowand then re-posted.

FYI, Abraham Linclon drank beer at McSorley's.