Roundabouts
I have said this before, but I have no problem talking about it again because good things have a tendency to come back around... and around... and around.
I try not to be a photographer to do things. I mean, my goal isn't to take photos. It isn't even to make photos. It just so happens that in my normal course of photography that I make lots of pictures, but I see this as a side benefit. I am a photographer to be things, not do them. I want to be creative. I want to be inquisitive. I want to be attentive. I want to be in the moment and I want to be hopeful of the future. I want to be fascinated and awe struck at the myriad subtleties to life and the world. I want to be aware of the fact that no matter where I go or when I am that there are so many things that are different than where I came from... and there are also so many things that are the same. I want to enjoy the pattern that a leaf makes skittering across the road in a gust of wind. I want to look back in uncertain curiosity at that cat crouched in the windowsill watching me. I want to spend some portion of my life wondering about the coincidence of that red car parked in front of that red house with the bush full of red flowers right between them. Who thinks these things up, after all?
Because then, regardless of whether photos come of the moment or not, I get something vastly more rewarding.
Take revolving doors for a moment. This is a revolving door I have walked past countless times. It is a door I have barely noticed. I have never felt a shred of curiosity about it. I have never walked through... never been tempted to walk through it... never had a reason to be tempted to walk through it. But this is what photography helps me to be... curious, with reason and cause.
I am well aware that there is a vast gulf of things we are blind to in our daily lives, things we take for granted or fail to notice. I know I never can, but I want to notice it all. I want a revolving door to be as fascinating as an ancient church in France.
Anyway, that is what this image is really all about.
Reality So Subtle 6x6 / Kodak Ektar 100 / 1 trip around.
Roundabouts
I have said this before, but I have no problem talking about it again because good things have a tendency to come back around... and around... and around.
I try not to be a photographer to do things. I mean, my goal isn't to take photos. It isn't even to make photos. It just so happens that in my normal course of photography that I make lots of pictures, but I see this as a side benefit. I am a photographer to be things, not do them. I want to be creative. I want to be inquisitive. I want to be attentive. I want to be in the moment and I want to be hopeful of the future. I want to be fascinated and awe struck at the myriad subtleties to life and the world. I want to be aware of the fact that no matter where I go or when I am that there are so many things that are different than where I came from... and there are also so many things that are the same. I want to enjoy the pattern that a leaf makes skittering across the road in a gust of wind. I want to look back in uncertain curiosity at that cat crouched in the windowsill watching me. I want to spend some portion of my life wondering about the coincidence of that red car parked in front of that red house with the bush full of red flowers right between them. Who thinks these things up, after all?
Because then, regardless of whether photos come of the moment or not, I get something vastly more rewarding.
Take revolving doors for a moment. This is a revolving door I have walked past countless times. It is a door I have barely noticed. I have never felt a shred of curiosity about it. I have never walked through... never been tempted to walk through it... never had a reason to be tempted to walk through it. But this is what photography helps me to be... curious, with reason and cause.
I am well aware that there is a vast gulf of things we are blind to in our daily lives, things we take for granted or fail to notice. I know I never can, but I want to notice it all. I want a revolving door to be as fascinating as an ancient church in France.
Anyway, that is what this image is really all about.
Reality So Subtle 6x6 / Kodak Ektar 100 / 1 trip around.