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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..

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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 rain (19)

Wednesday
Jan092013

decay # 48 / civilized ku # 2446 ~ found / made

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Rocks in outdoor sink ~ Phonicia, NY - in the Catskill Park • click to embiggen
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Cornbread, orange peels, beet • click to embiggen
While I was in Montreal, I came across the pictures of Claudio Napolitano. One of his pictures - # 13 in the linked portfolio - was in a gallery window and it most definitely caught my eye. Entering the gallery, # 2, 5 (kid with gas mask), and 9 were also on display. # 19, not on display, was listed as sold. FYI, most of the prints* were in the 36"×48" range (# 19 was 40"×80") with plexiglass adhered to the front of the print and mounted on aluminum (no frames). The price was $4,500 Canadian.

After spending some time viewing the prints, my initial caught-my-eye impression started to fade. The work just seemed contrived, ala Gregory Crewdson, and rather too "slick". I had expected to like the pictures but, in fact, they left me kinda cold. Eye catching, yes, in a weird kinda way, but, beyond the weirdness, they didn't strike much of an emotional / intellectual chord with me.

Consequently, upon returning home and reading (online) his bio and Artist Statement, I discovered that Napolitano is a highly regarded advertising picture maker. At that point, my feelings about the "slick" feel of the work and the contrived look of the children started to make sense. Obviously, Napolitano has brought all of his advertising picture making virtuoso to his Fine Art picture making. To my eye and sensibilities, that picturing M.O. was the reason for my ultimately rather cool, but not dismissive, reaction to the work.

All of which got me to thinking about made pictures, as opposed to found pictures. Part of where those ruminations led was to my experience with John Pfahl (pictures here), a Fine Art picture maker of some renown.

Back in the early 80s while he was teaching at RIT, Pfahl visited my studio at the behest of a friend (who also taught at RIT). The purpose of his visit was a meet and greet and for him to have an opportunity to view my personal / non-commercial pictures. Long story short, he was impressed with my personal work but he was utterly perplexed with the fact that I was a commercial / advertising picture maker and a Fine Art picture maker. That was due to the fact that, at that time, the two disciplines rarely, if ever, met within the same picture maker - advertising was advertising, Fine Art was Fine Art, and that was the way it was. Period.

That written, fast forward to today's Fine Art World, Photography Division, there are quite a few advertising picture makers who are also making Fine Art pictures. For better or for worse, that's the way it currently is. And, for the most part, those picture making practitioners are making made pictures. That is to write, pictures which are heavy on the concept side, not so much on the reality side.

In any event, I have no prejudice**, re: made pictures or, for that matter, advertising picture makers who make Fine Art pictures (I am one, after all). However, that written, my made picture preference runs toward those pictures which exhibit at least a modicum of found picture visual quality. Like, say, Jeff Wall's pictures as opposed to those of Gregory Crewdson - both make made pictures but Wall eschews the theatrical flourish production values employed by Crewdson.

All of that written, one of the many much-to-my-liking attributes of the previously mentioned Photo - wisdom. Master Photographers on Their Art book is that the book showcases mainly, but not exclusively, the work of those picture makers who make found pictures or pictures which look as though they might be of the found variety.

One of the notable exceptions to the found / found-like work is the pictures of Loretta Lux, whose work I find to be fascinating on so many levels ...

.... which brings me back to where this entry began, the work of Claudio Napolitano. Even though his pictures of children are of a type - children, distorted - which could be categorized with those of Loretta Lux, I just can't seem to warm up to them. The pictures are just too advertising slick in their visual appearance, whereas, I find Lux's pictures to be far more biased toward the world of Fine Art and, therefore, much more pleasing to my eye and sensibilities.

In summation, and relative to all of the aforewritten, I close with a quote from Joel Meyerowitz:

A lot of people put their intellectual concerns first with photography, but I think it is a discipline that is at first a visceral one. The primary aspect of this whole engagement with, and through, photography is to try to understand what your instincts are. Don't go counter to that, learn what the feeling is ... [I]f you keep following your every instinct - you want to get closer, kneel down, or jump up two steps - then just do it. The results will describe to you who you are. The visceral and the intuitive side will combine to show your intellect as a photographer. (emphasis mine)

*FYI, most of the prints were in the 36"×48" range (# 19 was 40"×80") with plexiglass adhered to the front of the print and mounted on aluminum (no frames). The price was $4,500 Canadian.

**That is, no prejudice with the exception of those pictures which are so concept driven that they become little more than visual and photo vernacular gibberish - those pictures most favored by the academic lunatic fringe.

Friday
Oct052012

civilized ku # 2365 / ku # 1201-10 (rain # 45-55) ~ death, decay, and dormancy - pt. II

Autumn color # 12 ~ Jay, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen1044757-20532555-thumbnail.jpg
Autumn color # 13 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 14 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 15 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 16 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 17 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 18 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 19 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 20 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 21 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 22 • click to embiggen
As promised, here's the rest of the rainy day Autumn Color pictures.

I am curious to know, of the all the pictures from yesterday's and today's entries, which picture do you think is most Autumn color cliché-like and, conversely, which one is the least cliché-like? As always comments are appreciated.

Thursday
Oct042012

civilized ku # 2364 / ku # 1191-1200 (rain # 34-44) ~ death, decay, and dormancy 

Autumn color # 1 ~ in the vicinity of Au Sable Forks, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen1044757-20525531-thumbnail.jpg
Autumn color # 2 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 3 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 4 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 5 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 6 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 7 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 8 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 9 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 10 • click to embiggen
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Autumn color # 11 • click to embiggen
If I could be accused of "chasing the light", it would be attributable to the fact that there is nothing like a rainy day to get me out and about in pursuit of picture making. Although, truth be told, it's not the light to be had on a rainy that draws me out, it's the complete atmospheric package which tickles my eye and sensibilities.

The light on a rainy day is rather flat and not very conducive to rendering the features / details of the landscape. However, the rain itself transforms the landscape with a fine mist (during a heavy downpour, not so fine), occasional fog, and a saturating effect on everything it touches so that the colors of the landscape, natural and man-made, become deep/dark, yet muted. Plain and simple, I just like the way things look on a rainy day.

That written, I mentioned in today's earlier entry that I was out and about with the intention of making pictures of Autumn which avoided the generic screaming fall foliage genre. Picturing in the rain certainly provides a good head start on that objective inasmuch as it stands diametrically opposed to the ubiquitous sunny Autumn day pictures which we all know and love(?). But that's not the whole of it.

While most think of Autumn as a rather celebrate-the-color season, the fact remains that Autumn is as much about death and decay as it is about riotous color. Beneath the color, there is a natural process of shutting things down and the beginning of a slow slide into dormancy and it is that aspect of Autumn which I appreciate the most. IMO, it's just as joyous as the radiant color of Autumn, simply because it's all part of the wonder of life.

At least that's how I see and picture it.

FYI, this entry is comprised of only half of the pictures I made during my recent out-and-abouting. I'll post the other half tomorrow.

FYI # 2, for those of you interested in such things, unlike my normal / regular picturing M.O., a fairly inordinate (for me) number of these pictures - #s 1, 5, 7, 9, and 10 - were made using my Zuiko 50-200mm f2.8/3.5 lens. This lens is anything but small so mounting it on any of my E-Px cameras results in a look akin to the tail wagging the dog. Fortunately, the lens has a rotating tripod mount collar so I mount the lens to the tripod, not the camera. BTW, it's one of sharpest lenses (at all focal lengths) I have ever owned. And, picturing in the rain wise, it's also sealed against dust and moisture.

Wednesday
Sep192012

rain # 25-33 ~ rainy day and a Chinese dinner

Utility pole ~ Jay, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen1044757-20345910-thumbnail.jpg
Mountain mist ~ Jay, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
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Tractor ~ Au Sable Forks, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
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Embankment ~ Jay, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
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Grassy clump ~ Au Sable Forks, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
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2 trees ~ Au Sable Forks, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
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Leaning tree ~ Au Sable Forks, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
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Roadside ~ Au Sable Forks, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
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Tree trunk ~ Au Sable Forks, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
Yesterday, by mid morning, it began to rain and did so for most of the day. It was a great day for making rain pictures although I went out with the intention of making 1 picture - Utility pole. A picture for the making of which I had been waiting for rain.

Waiting for particular conditions or light is not my normal picturing MO. As most of you know, my usual picturing making is accomplished by having a camera(s) with me at all times in order to picture whatever happens to come my way / catch my eye. Other than assignment oriented picture making, which requires making pictures of specific referents, just being prepared to make a picture of whatever catches my eye and tweaks my sensibilities is the order of any given day.

Yesterday's specific referent / conditions picture making outing was different in its intent but similar in results to my usual picturing habits. That is, between here and my referent objective (and there about), quite a number of picture making possibilities where evident. So, as can be seen above, I made a bunch of pictures.

Interesting enough, I didn't get the exact picture I set out to make. While I did make a Utility pole picture, it is not the picture I had 'pre-visualized' - That picture, the one wanted to make, would have required a much heavier rainfall. I don't know why, but I see, in my minds eye, that scene in a very heavy downpour with rain very much in evidence.

The heavy downpour did eventually appear but much later in the day. Unfortunately, picture making wise, as I was preparing to head out to the same scene again, the wife showed up with a takeout Chinese dinner. So, rather than fiddling with my camera(s), I fiddled with chopsticks instead.

Maybe I'll have better luck next time - rain wise, not dinner wise.

Wednesday
Sep052012

civlized ku # 2317 ~ small is beautiful

Principal's office / Inlet Common School ~ Inlet, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen

Thursday
Aug162012

rain # 24 / kitchen life # 31 / ku # 1161 ~ another 24 hours

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Stop sign in headlights/ rain ~ Au Sable Forks, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
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Corn holders / dirty dishes ~ Au Sable Forks, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
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Evening / roadside flora ~ Wilmington, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen

I think about photographs as being full, or empty. You picture something in a frame and it's got lots of accounting going on in it--stones and buildings and trees and air--but that's not what fills up a frame. You fill up the frame with feelings, energy, discovery, and risk, and leave room enough for someone else to get in there. ~ Joel Meyerowitz

Wednesday
Aug152012

rain # 23 ~ avoiding the tidal wave

Au Sable Motors ~ Au Sable Forks, NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggenOn yesterday's entry, a question, John Linn

You wrote..." picture makers have, literally and figuratively, "opened their eyes" and are engaged with the act of seeing, many on a daily basis."

I have not seen that. I see crappy photos of people holding beer glasses or mugging the camera. And even shots that have promise are technically so bad, even those made by people who should know better and have the skills to do better.

So you are saying the Facebook photographers are "seeing"?

my response: In the category of "more and more avid amateur picture makers ... have, literally and figuratively, "opened their eyes" and are engaged with the act of seeing", I most definitely was not including those in social media crowd - Facebook, Instagram, Flickr (some good work can be found there if one is willing to wade through a sea of crap), ad nauseum. In that respect, I agree with John and his "crappy photos" assessment.

However, there is ample online evidence that there is a rather large number of avid amateur pictures who do indeed have their eyes open and are actively engaged in the act of seeing. To view this evidence, one needs to breakout of the social media loop and get into the online photography magazine arena which also spreads its tentacles to a host of related sites (mainly to those of picture makers).

As an example, check out the photographer listings on URBANAUTICA. You could spend a year full of a month of Sundays trying to get through that list and all of the related links. And, URBANAUTICA is just one of a sea of such sites.

In any event, now that "everyone's a photographer", the amount of crappy pictures being made has reached tsunami proportions. My advice? You need to get to higher ground ASAP.

Friday
Aug102012

civilized ku # 2299-2305 / ku # 1160 / rain # 20-22 ~ let me see it

The pool ~ Stone Harbor, NJ • click to embiggen1044757-19794637-thumbnail.jpg
Barn / Chateaugay Windpark ~ Franklin County, NY • click to embiggen
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Grasses ~ Lyon Mt., NY - in the Adirondack Park • click to embiggen
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Rain ~ Au Sable Forks, NY • click to embiggen
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Corn / Chateaugay Windpark ~ Franklin County, NY • click to embiggen
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Front porch ~ Stone Harbor, NJ • click to embiggen
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Rain / Palmer and N. Main ~ Au Sable Forks, NY • click to embiggen
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Lake Flower ~ Saranac Lake, NY - in the Adirondack PARK • click to embiggen
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Rental Center ~ Saranac Lake, NY - in the Adirondack PARK • click to embiggen
In last Friday's it's time for next IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT (a PDF, best viewed/read at 100-125%) entry, I mentioned that I am seeking submissions for consideration, re: for publication as feature articles for my picture magazine endeavor. So, in this entry I will clarify, in a very general manner, what kind of pictures I am interested in reviewing and, perchance, publishing.

First and foremost, I am interested in pictures which are part of a coherent body of work - any body of work, no matter the theme or referents. People, places (natural or man-made), things or any combination thereof are all open to consideration.

While special consideration will be given to work which starts with seeing (as opposed to concept), pictures in a body of work may be of the found (observations of the real) or made (still life, tableau vivant, etc.) variety. However, technique and/or technical considerations which place a picture at a remove from the medium's intrinsic relationship with the real will be given short shrift.

That said written, and to borrow from David Hurn - in an interview / conversation with Bill Jay from the book On Being a Photographer - what interests me most, picture/work for publication wise, are pictures which display beauty while "revealing a sensation of strangeness, not predictability, a kind of shock non-recognition inside the familiar. The opposite of cliches; pictures which have a quality beyond the visually obvious. But even if it is difficult to define, beauty still lurks behind the scenes".

I am also very interested in pictures made by Profligatographers, a word coined by the guy at More Original Refrigerator Art to describe himself. A word which, IMO, is a perfect descriptor for the profligate and discursive picture makers who, primarily as a result of the digital picture making 'revolution', are making more pictures than they know what to do with. For them, after purchasing a digital picture making device, it's like having free film and processing for life which enables them to make what was formerly considered to be the work of a lifetime in as little as the course of a year, more or less.

Profligatographers, unlike many who make theme / referent related work, make unified bodies of work which are made coherent by their concentrated efforts on the simple act of seeing. Despite their seemingly promiscuous choice of picturing referents, a Profligatographer very often has a distinctive personal vision / manner of seeing which pulls everything together, body of work wise.

IMO, Profligatography - hey, if there are Profligatographers, there must also be Profligatography, right? - is a little understood and appreciated result of the so-called digital 'revolution'. Without going all flapdoodle-and-green-paint on the subject (like stating that I wish to formulate and disseminate didactic conjectural theory espousing a neophutos-like toxonomy of the new symbolic order), it is the pictorial and scio-cultural results and implications of Profligatography which I wish to explore and exhibit in my picture magazine publication.

As mentioned, the submission line is open. Act now. Don't delay. Be the first in your neighborhood to be considered for publication in On Seeing. And please, spread the word - tell all your friends and neighbors that they too can get in on the fun.

Please send a few samples, 72dpi x 800pixels (longest dimension), to: Picture Submission

FYI, I consider myself to be a Profligatographer of the first order. The pictures in this entry are just a few of the 50+ pictures (finished "keepers") I have made in just the past 2 weeks. And, in case you're wondering, I believe the pictures to be part of a body of work which is unified by a common vision and, therefore, typical of a body of work which might be submitted for consideration.