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This blog is intended to showcase my pictures or those of other photographers who have moved beyond the pretty picture and for whom photography is more than entertainment - photography that aims at being true, not at being beautiful because what is true is most often beautiful..

>>>> Comments, commentary and lively discussions, re: my writings or any topic germane to the medium and its apparatus, are vigorously encouraged.

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BODIES OF WORK ~ PICTURE GALLERIES

  • my new GALLERIES WEBSITE
    ADK PLACES TO SIT / LIFE WITHOUT THE APA / RAIN / THE FORKS / EARLY WORK / TANGLES

BODIES OF WORK ~ BOOK LINKS

In Situ ~ la, la, how the life goes onLife without the APADoorsKitchen SinkRain2014 • Year in ReviewPlace To SitART ~ conveys / transports / reflectsDecay & DisgustSingle WomenPicture WindowsTangles ~ fields of visual energy (10 picture preview) • The Light + BW mini-galleryKitchen Life (gallery) • The Forks ~ there's no place like home (gallery)


Entries in ku, landscape of the natural world (481)

Wednesday
Jun192013

civilized ku # 2539 ~ late Spring / early Summer lushness

Lush backyard ~ Au Sable Forks, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggenIn a comment on the entry ku # 1244-47, Peter Nilsson wrote:

Without wishing this to sound like the Mark Hobson fan club I do particularly value the regular reminder that I don't need to buy a new camera. Saves me thousands...

Peter, thanks for non-fan club comment although, nevertheless, I am willing to give you preferred fan club standing. That written, I'm happy to read that I am having some impact / doing my part in helping some stay off the never-ending upgrade merry-go-round. Although ... Olympus has finally introduced the new E-P5 - a camera which "looks as though the E-P5 is the camera we'd always hoped the PEN series could be" (DPReview).

If I had unlimited resources, I might be tempted to acquire the E-P5 (the upgrade force is still strong within me). However, please note the emphasis on the word "might". The reason for that is quite simple - I'm still very satisfied with my current crop of E-P2s.

Sure, the sensor in the E-P5 is much improved and the high ISO performance is vastly improved - the only 2 things I actually might care about in the new model - but, while those improvements might be needed by some and desired by others, I'm not so sure that either of those rational or emotional states of mind are at work in my picture making world.

To wit, re: improved definition / sharpness - I have never been on the eye-bleeding razor-sharp bandwagon. What I want is for my prints to look very nice at a normal viewing distance (it is beyond my comprehension why anyone would want to view a picture from an abnormal viewing distance). That is to write, a distance which is dependent upon print size and appropriate for viewing the picture in its entirety because it is only by viewing the entire picture that a viewer can (hopefully) see and appreciate what it is I am trying to convey. IMO, my pictures (and those, made by others, which appeal to my eye and sensibilities) are about more than the sum of their nose-to-the-print-surface parts.

In addition to my non-addiction to razor sharpness, I am concerned with the idea that a sensor which produces pictures which, when viewed at a normal viewing distance and when added to any of the pictures in my ongoing bodies of work, would look visually different from my earlier pictures in that same body of work and therefore out of sync within the body of work.

As for improved low-noise high ISO performance, it would be nice but, in fact, noise is not something I struggle with on a regular basis. Having a few fast pancake lenses in my bag really helps avoid having to use high ISOs (I rarely go higher than ISO 400). In those cases where noise becomes a concern, I find a little bit of noise reduction works very well to solve the so-called problem.

That written, if I were to start a body of work which concentrated upon low-light situations and referents, I would undoubtedly feel differently about high ISO performance.

So, I'll soldier on, dancing with the cameras dates I brought to dance. If I'm going to spend money on any cameras, it most likely will be to snap up a few of the inevitable supply of new (not used), bargain basement priced E-P3s which will become available.

Tuesday
Jun182013

ku # 1244-47 ~ a beautiful rainy Father's Day

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Elk Lake ~ North Hudson, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
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Dock / Elk Lake ~ North Hudson, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
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Picture maker ~ Buttermilk Falls / Long Lake, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
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Rapids above falls ~ Buttermilk Falls / Long Lake, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen

Even though Sunday was a misty/foggy and rainy day, we took a 180 mile drive through the northeast section of the Adirondack PARK.

First stop was Elk Lake Lodge, a lodge which is situated in a stunningly beautiful location - a 12,000-acre privately-owned forest preserve in the heart of the High Peaks. The lodge is situated about 6 miles through the forest off the main road so it is truly a wilderness lodge. Even though the lodge is pretty close to our home, the wife and I have had this place on our gotta-stay-there list for over 10 years. Maybe this year is the year.

A number of stops later, the next stop was at Buttermilk Falls (on the Raquette River near the village of Long Lake where the wife and I were married) which was running very high as a result of all of the recent rain. After checking out the falls, we adjourned to the Adirondack Hotel where I enjoyed a unique and quite tasty dinner of Guinness BBQ beef hash over risotto topped with a poached egg.

Thursday
Jun062013

diptych # 33 (ku # 1242-43) ~ leaving a shape belonging not to the subject

Seaweed and rock ~ Blue Rocks - Nova Scotia, Canada • click to embiggenJohn Szarkowski wrote, when writing about The Frame as one of the medium's five inherent characteristics:

The edges of the picture were seldom neat. Parts of figures or buildings or features of landscape were truncated, leaving a shape belonging not to the subject but (if the picture was a good one) to the balance, the propriety, of the image.

IMO, not a whole lot more needs to be written / stated about the subject of good "composition".

Tuesday
May282013

triptych # 10-11 (ku # 1236-41) ~ water and atmospherics

Water and atmospherics ~ St. Mary's Bay - Nova Scotia, Canada • click to embiggenIf the wife had not been with me outside of Digby, Nova Scotia, I could have spent the better part of 4 days picturing the ever-changing view of the water and atmospherics from the deck of our rental house.

PS Because of the no-so-good results of downsampling these pictures so that the triptychs fit on a smaller screen, I have presented them @ a 2000 pixel wide. By using your browser's Zoom Out function, they can be debiggened to fit your screen.

Saturday
May252013

ku # 1233-35 ~ Nova Scotia interuptus / Adirondack Spring rain

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Notch island / Au Sable River West Branch ~ Wilmington, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
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Jay rapids / Au Sable River East Branch ~ Jay, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
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The Notch / Au Sable River West Branch ~ Wilmington, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
Interupting the Nova Scotia picture parade are 3 pictures made today of the Spring rain swollen West and East Branch of the Au Sable River.

Tuesday
Mar052013

ku # 1232 ~ explanation entry, Part 3 - an observed lacuna is generating an ambiguity

Black hose ~ Au Sable Forks, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggenIn the previous explanation entry, diptych # 26 ~ explanation entry, Part 2, I wrote:

I need to get my work circulating. That reaction was instigated by my pondering of the notion that, if my picture windows sample book had arrived at the door of the Margan Lehman Gallery before Allee's Frame of View portfolio (or whatever he submitted), would I be the one to have an exhibition?

IMO, the answer to that rumination is, "No".

There are a number of reasons for that supposition ...

I went on to write about 2 of those suppositions with a notation that I would write about a 3rd supposition in another explanation entry (while this entry is concerned with my efforts to have gallery exhibitions, it could also be construed to apply to anyone's efforts to enter photo competitions / contests), so ...

First, a little history: Early (6 months after acquiring my first camera) in my shallow and callow picture making youth, while I was toiling (in Japan) for Uncle Sam making charts and graphs, I entered a world-wide military photo contest. 3 of my pictures won 1st place in 3 different categories - nature, architecture, and abstract - at the local level. 2 of those pictures went on to garner top 3 recognition at the regional and all-theater (Pacific Theater) level as well.

Arguably, and justifiably so, those photo competition / contest awards were the single most influential reason I went on to become a professional picture maker.

Within a month or so after my success, our Command's photographer was transferred back to the States. Without a replacement in place, I raised my hand and said, "I'll do it." On the strength of those awards, the response to my "volunteering" effort was, "OK. You can do it." Whereupon I was handed the Keys to the Kingdom in the form of a military-issue 4×5 Speed Graphic (with flash attachment)*, to which I responded, "What the f**k is this?"

Nevertheless, the rest, as they say, is history.

What I really didn't realize at the time of my photo competition / contest success was exactly how incredibly lucky I was. For, as I have come to learn / understand, entering a photo contest with the hope of winning or finishing in the running is, at best, a crapshoot, or, at worst, a waste of time. The same could be said of submitting work with the hope of having a gallery exhibit.

While I have had reasonable success with both contests (I rarely do contests anymore) and gallery / art institution exhibitions (4 solo, 2 group, 1 PBS segment in the past 2 years) without a doubt, my experiences in such endeavors have demonstrated one thing loud and clear - one person's garbage is another person's gold. As is evidenced by the range of responses to my picture windows ~ this is a quiz entry, the manner in which any one person responds to a given picture is an exercise in idiosyncrasy of the highest order.

While it's true that what one gets out of a picture is intrinsically linked to what one brings to it (attitude, visual / art literacy, life experience), nevertheless, even individuals with a relatively similar level of bringing it on will inevitably have different - often radically different - viewing and emotional / intellectual experiences and results. While there might be some level of observer objectivity involved in the viewing process, there can be no denying that subjectivity is the reigning order of business.

Consequently, IMO and relative to whether I may or may not have had any success with my picture windows work at the Morgan Lehman gallery, given a large number - have no doubt about it, there are a very large number - of picture makers with relatively similar high-level work / bodies of work, it's still going to be a crapshoot, re: whose work gets exhibited and whose does not.

This is especially true in the commercial gallery sphere. Not only does one's work have to connect on an art level with the gallery owner or curator, but it must also connect with him/her/them on a this-work-is-salable level as well. Galleries aren't in it for their artist health or an altruistic devotion to the advancement of fine art photography, they're in it to make a profit. Even art institutions have to keep their donors / supporters / patrons happy (and hence, giving), not to mention the admission paying public as well.

An Aside - re: this-work-is-salable. You may have noticed that David Allee's Frame of View exhibit is his 3rd solo exhibit at the Lehman Gallery. I think it safe to assume that the first 2 exhibits had reasonable this-work-is-salable success. Consequently, even if my picture windows work struck the right art chord with the gallery director, the decision pendulum would have swung to Allee's work based upon his track record with the first 2 solo exhibits.

All of that said, and assuming your work is of very high caliber, for there to be any success in having a gallery exhibit or win, place, or show in a photo competition / contest, I believe it to be a numbers game. You do have to get your work out there. While that should be done with an intelligent approach - sending nature pictures to a gallery or contest which normally features street pictures is a waste of time - one really has to play the numbers game.

That is, getting your work seen by as many people as as possible, knowing that doing so will eventually hook you up with a few gallery directors / art instiution curators who "get it", re: your work.

*Ironically enough, I had to travel halfway around the planet to be introduced to a camera which was manufactured in my own hometown (Rochester, NY). Also, again ironically enough, I had to travel halfway around the globe to discover an interest in making pictures. Something I never did while growing up and festering as a youth in the Photo Capital of the World, right in the shadow of the Big Yellow Box.

Monday
Mar042013

civilized ku # 2478 / ku # 1231 ~ rhopographer or megalographer - which are you?

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Rhopograghy(?) ~ Saranac Lake, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
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Megalography(?) ~ Lower Saranac Lake, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
Over the past few entries, you may noticed that I have been somewhat preoccupied with artspeak. Perhaps, on my part, it is just that I have been sucked into a weird vortex which has drawn me into its arcane and obtuse universe. That must be so because I'm really not considering the adaptation of artspeak into my linguistic repertoire.

However, that written, as I perusing an all-things-photography academic forum, I came across an article - If not now when: beyond indexical transparency On Still lifes Photographs - which led me to the notion of rhopography. Technically, rhopography is a name applied to still life painting / photographs. However, despite that specific nomenclature, I have no trouble relating to it as a more broad descriptor for the type of pictures I am most inclined to create ....

Rhopography relates to the portrayal of objects which lack immediate significance - the basic mundane objects that surround us in our daily environments. In contrast to Megalography, which relates to the depiction of ‘importance’ and themes in the world which represent greatness, the humbleness of rhopography, has in fact a profound depth as it explores the base human existential dilemma at its core by stripping it of all garnishes of grandeur or self importance. In this fashion a sharp contrast or transformation occurs as objects which are usually taken for granted, in this context, are linked to much more refined and exalted existential issues – namely, the limited scope the individual human endeavor. We can argue that rhopography is the ontological raison d'être of still lifes both in painting and photography.

Artspeak aside, I am pleased as punch to realize that my picture making has and is driven by an ontological raison d'être. Maybe I should consider dropping the idea of picture maker as a self-descriptor and get on with labeling myself as a rhopographer.

Friday
Mar012013

civilized ku # 2477 ~ wherein I make a picture in which the fragility and instability of our seemingly certain reality is questioned

Wet sticky snow ~ Au Sable Forks, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggenThe PBS segment about my life without the APA work aired last evening. You can view it here. IMO, they did a very good job of editing and putting it all together.

Unfortunately, before we did the video for the segment, I was not aware of the existence of the Automatic Artist Biography Generator (linked supplied by The Cinemascapist). If I had been, I could have talked like this (as generated by the Automatic Artist Biography Generator machine):

"I am an artist who mainly works with photography. With a conceptual approach, I consider making art a craft which is executed using clear formal rules and which should always refer to social reality.

My photos are notable for their perfect finish and tactile nature. This is of great importance and bears witness to great craftsmanship. By focusing on techniques and materials, I seduce the viewer into a world of ongoing equilibrium and the interval that articulates the stream of daily events. Moments are depicted that only exist to punctuate the human drama in order to clarify our existence and to find poetic meaning in everyday life.

My works are based on formal associations which open a unique poetic vein. Multilayered images arise in which the fragility and instability of our seemingly certain reality is questioned. By emphasising aesthetics, I try to develop forms that do not follow logical criteria, but are based only on subjective associations and formal parallels, which incite the viewer to make new personal associations.

My works sometimes radiate a cold and analytical ambiance. At times, disconcerting beauty emerges. The inherent visual seductiveness, along with the conciseness of the exhibitions, further complicates the reception of their manifold layers of meaning. By choosing mainly formal solutions, I try to approach a wide scale of subjects in a multi-layered way, like to involve the viewer in a way that is sometimes physical and believe in the idea of function following form in a work.

My works directly respond to the surrounding environment and use everyday experiences from the artist (in me) as a starting point. Often these are framed instances that would go unnoticed in their original context.

I currently live and work in Au Sable Forks, New York."

Man, I would have sounded like a real art genius. I highly recommend that you give the AABG machine a whirl.

But if you're just looking for a phrase or two to throw out at the next exhibit opening you attend, you might give the The Instant Art Critique Phrase Generator a try. It's free, and other than spending a couple years of your life and $40,000.00 to get a MFA, how the hell else are you gonna learn how to talk this way? ...

"It's difficult to enter into this work because of how the metaphorical resonance of the referential signifier endangers the devious simplicity of the inherent overspecificity." or "It should be added that the reductive quality of the gesture visually and conceptually activates the substructure of critical thinking."

Hey, you can knock me over with a feather if that don't sound like a great way to hit on and pick up art chicks. Or, vice-versa, if you're a chick.