ORE NO MORE
Hit the Inner Harbor for 10 minutes of photography before work Saturday; just enough time to grab this shot of the Mather floating museum. This image has been worked over in Photoshop, so call it a lomograph if you like ... or an homage to "Vanilla Sky."
"When we return home to 'tell our day,' we are artfully shaping material into story form. … So in a way we all exist in a literary atmosphere, we live and breathe literature, we are all literary artists, we are constantly employing language to make interesting forms of experience, which perhaps originally seemed dull or incoherent. How far reshaping involves offences against truth is a problem any artist must face. A deep motive for making literature or art of any sort is the desire to defeat the formlessness of the world and cheer oneself up by constructing forms out of what might otherwise seem a mass of senseless rubble." -- Iris Murdoch
PLEASE NOTE: This optional philosophy quote -- which I hope does not detract from the image -- has been included only for those who like to encounter a thought-provoking idea attached to a photo and is not meant as an attack on anyone's views, theories or beliefs. This feature is in response to suggestions and requests from some of my most beloved contacts. The quote came from this page on my Web site.
ORE NO MORE
Hit the Inner Harbor for 10 minutes of photography before work Saturday; just enough time to grab this shot of the Mather floating museum. This image has been worked over in Photoshop, so call it a lomograph if you like ... or an homage to "Vanilla Sky."
"When we return home to 'tell our day,' we are artfully shaping material into story form. … So in a way we all exist in a literary atmosphere, we live and breathe literature, we are all literary artists, we are constantly employing language to make interesting forms of experience, which perhaps originally seemed dull or incoherent. How far reshaping involves offences against truth is a problem any artist must face. A deep motive for making literature or art of any sort is the desire to defeat the formlessness of the world and cheer oneself up by constructing forms out of what might otherwise seem a mass of senseless rubble." -- Iris Murdoch
PLEASE NOTE: This optional philosophy quote -- which I hope does not detract from the image -- has been included only for those who like to encounter a thought-provoking idea attached to a photo and is not meant as an attack on anyone's views, theories or beliefs. This feature is in response to suggestions and requests from some of my most beloved contacts. The quote came from this page on my Web site.