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About This Website

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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Monday
Oct162006

Mary Dennis ~ Tangled Web


This morning I think I found everything I like about autumn in the crook of a fallen branch.

It's a Tangled Web She Weaves
Monday
Oct162006

ku # 416


Remnants and mark downs always seem to draw a crowd at the carpet store but in the natural world they draw blank stares or, more often, no stares at all. Anyone see the connection with the war in Iraq?...or is that a foolish question - linking a nature photograph and a war...
Saturday
Oct142006

ku # 415


There is a purity to natural happenstance. Things just happen. No reason. No meaning. No malice aforethought. Just being...a part of the eternal flow.
Saturday
Oct142006

Rob White ~ a "happy shot"


This shot was what I call a "happy shot"-one that I grabbed that turned out somewhat decently. My wife and I were on the way to Highlands, N.C. When we came on Moon Lake dam. From the road, you can see almost a mile across the lake it forms, and my intent was to try to get level with the top of the dam and take a shot showing the lake stretching on forever-or so I thought. Instead, I saw that I could scramble down a roughly seventy-five foot deep path and get to the river bottom at the base of the dam.

This is what I saw, and what I photographed.

What attracted me was the pattern of the water falling off the dam in kind of a "diamond rope" pattern. What I got was that AND the tumult of the rocks to the right side. I hope this photo gives all of you the pleasure it has given me, and I look forward to sending some good shots when my skills improve.
Friday
Oct132006

A Lost Love



Before digital instant photographic gratification meant Polaroid - in this case, the venerable SX-70. Man, how I love(d) that camera. I have 3 of them. The problem is, with Tine Zero film gone, they're now relegated to the status of photographic curiosities. Damn...another part of the photographic medium gone, just flat out gone. Ahhh, progress.

One has to wonder how much longer the Polaroid Corporation will be around. However, if it were to disappear tomorrow, there can be no denying that one of the most incredible collections of photography ever created - The Polaroid Collections - will stand as a unique and enduring legacy of the medium of photography and a photographic era.

Since the inception of instant photography over 50 years ago, Polaroid Corporation has promoted photography as art through its Artist Support Program. The program grew out of an early collaboration - essentially a research activity - between Polaroid founder Edwin Land and Ansel Adams (check out this Adams Polaroid self-portrait). 50 years later, Polaroid's support of photographers from around the world has created a polaroid photography collection that numbers over 23,000 photographs by more 1,000 photographers.

Simply amazing.

For those who love photography, not just Polaroid photography, a must have book is The Polaroid Book. With 287 images, it gives a glimpse of one of the world's most incredible collections of photography. It is a vibrant and engaging testament to a rich and rewarding benefactorial relationship between a photographic corporation and photographic artists that will never be seen again. Tragically (not in the human catastrophe sense), it is also a sign post of a passing era on the road of "progress".

the photograph(s) ~ SX-70 photographs by Mark Hobson Allegheny Commons - Pittsburgh, PA
Thursday
Oct122006

Immersion idyllic


People speak of being wrapped in nature's embrace, but I think that the operative word here is rapt. On a long hike in the Adirondack woods, we encounterd a garden of mossy eden. The temptation to roll around on/in it was too great to resist. Years later I learned that my 10 year old son and his friend had sneaked back for a surreptitious glimpse...

the photograph ~ 35mm Polaroid Instant BW slide film photograph by Mark Hobson along the trail to High Falls in the Five Ponds Wiilderness Area- Adirondack Mts, NY
Thursday
Oct122006

a ku-less urban kinda autumn


A landscape of a different nature. The gaze of an 8x10 view camera (with color negative film) renders the denoted with a rather stunning sense of the real/truth. Does this effect the connoted in any way?

the photograph ~ by Mark Hobson Downtown park along the Genesee River - Rochester, NY
Wednesday
Oct112006

Jim Jirka ~ Marsh Color Diptych


The smell from the decaying vegetation in the stagnant water, to me is very aromatic. The water has not been replenished this summer due to the lack of rain, in this, one of the driest summers on record in the Pacific Northwest.
Somehow the marsh is still vibrant in many ways. It still has a subtle presence in nature, if one would take the time to enjoy.