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Monday, September 13, 2010

Finding Vision…

David duChemin is a humanitarian photographer out of Vancouver, BC, and has done a lot of work for World Vision. His photography is, from my perspective, poetry. David spends a lot of time talking about vision, and it’s precisely that point of view that encouraged me to pick up one of his books Within the Frame: The Journey of Photographic Vision. Most photography books are highly technical, and there’s nothing wrong with that, but I’m enrolled in a technical program, and I have at least two other books on the technical aspects of photography.  However, to be a photographer, there is something just a step beyond the technical that makes a picture magical.  For David, that epiphanal aspect is vision.

So why did I subtitle my blog “Finding vision through the craft of photography”? This is the question I was asking myself this morning.  I know that’s silly, shouldn’t I have thought that out before putting pen to paper (so to speak)?  Well, yes and no…I believe we’re motivated by the subconscious, so even when we don’t fully understand our actions, it doesn’t necessarily mean they’re thoughtless. So, as I set up the blog, I kept looking at that sentence and tried to find another way to say it, but couldn’t find anything that held on to the emotion I needed to convey, so I went with it. This morning my inner voice was nagging me again, “Shouldn’t a photographer communicate vision with photography? And by doing so doesn’t that imply that they already have the vision? And if they already have the vision, why would they find it while communicating it?”. Well, today, I told my inner voice to stop being so damn literal! 

It’s true that vision is essential to photographs. After all what I need to show you should have some meaning behind it, otherwise why waste your time on it? Perhaps a photographer should have vision all sown up prior to shooting, but as I look at a collection of pictures I took while at the 2009 Lavender Festival in Sequim (pronounced Sqwim) Washington, I remember “finding” my vision that day. I remember going from farm to farm, and discovering the joy I had in selective focus pictures, and how to this day, those are still my favorite shots.  Perhaps one day, when I’m an all-grown-up-photographer, I will have vision in the bag, but for now, I’m a student.  And, truthfully, I hope I never stop learning from shot to shot, because for each picture I take, I’m not just revealing to you something of the world around me, I’m revealing a little bit of myself, as well.

Queen Lavendar 2 Plant Sale Bird House in the Fields

Taken at the Lavender Festival in Sequim, Washington July 2009

Saturday, September 11, 2010

As We Begin…

As I contemplate how to begin this blog, I’m beginning my third unit of lessons at NYIP, which is all about light.  Light, and it’s manipulation thereof is what has always intimidated me most about photography.  This is perhaps the primary reason why I decided to enroll in an accredited program, because I know that light makes all the difference in the world when it comes to the success of a photo. 

As the lesson opens the Dean, Chuck Delaney, talks about the origins and literal meaning of the word: photography.  It comes from the Greek as coined by John Herschel: photo meaning light, and graphos meaning to write. Thus, photography means: writing with light. I can’t quite think of a more beautiful way of describing this artistic craft I’m undertaking.

I’m committed to making a regular journal of my trials and tribulations as I learn to “write with light”, for those of you who come along with me on my journey, I’m blessed to have you.  I hope in turn I can bless you with some of my attempts. 

And, as we begin this journey together, I thought it appropriate to share with you my attempt to capture the last light of the day:

Snoqualmie Falls 5

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Taken at Snoqualmie Falls in Washington State. July 17th 2010. Nikon D40 18mm f/20 1/50