Say-So

6/17/2008

Approaching 1K

On my recent trip up to Vancouver, I have not left the apartment I stayed in for three days in a row. The grey sky obscured the world, blanketed and isolated me. Time halted, as the sun stopped marking the times of the day. My dog turned into a cat. He ate canned tuna and slept all day. The twilight was all encompassing and everlasting.

On any other visit, 3 days at a time over long weekends, I have no misgivings about efficient use of my time. I head out to shoot. I want to score photos to label otherwise than “San Francisco” and tilt the balance away from the overbearingly heavy font on my photoblog. The shooting experience varies from city to city. Having returned to photograph in the same locations multiple times, I am beginning to notice a consistency in the type of photographs I am inclined to take at each place. I recognize a few factors. First being how easy is it to maneuver and physically navigate the streets. Last is my own personal and emotional response to that location. Somewhere in the middle, caught in between the two extremes are my subjects, the locals who live and work, their culture, manners and their degree of expressivity.

Vancouver is difficult differently from Buenos Aires. The streets of Buenos Aires are narrow and crowded or wide and very crowded. The pace of traffic both human and motorized is overwhelming. I find myself wearing a constant look of bewilderment as if a gust of wind generated by the heaving multitudes snatched my hat and left me with one hand mid air too late to catch it. On the streets of Buenos Aires I tend to front assault. Since there is no time or room to move around my subjects, I spot a scene some distance away, keep walking towards it while watching it approach. I wait for it to walk into my frame at a given focal length. In one movement, I jerk, focus and shoot, putting the camera away as my subjects and I brush shoulders in passing. I often catch the “deer in the headlight” look on people’s faces which is interesting in itself but rewarding and entertaining for only so long.

While Buenos Aires incapacitates with visual excess, Vancouver has me look harder for new ways to frame a shot. In a city which separates walk-ways from bicycle-lanes, where every person passing offers a helping hand to a stranded cyclist, where school boys bum free rides on city busses by asking the driver for permission, in the ruling territory of “thank you and please” the public is very reserved and proper. On Robson street shoppers walk, at cafes patrons sip and sit, at the beach families and friends lay and relax. Whatever it is the residents engage in, it is unhurried, measured and low key. On grand avenues and at green city squares I lurk behind bus stops and by cafe’s vitrines, to include reflections, shadows or other lines in hopes of making mundane city inaction into a scene of interest.

Warsaw is paralyzing. I walk for days with the camera hang over my shoulder. I become a teenager who suddenly sprouted in height and towers over her peers. I am self conscious about my camera. It betrays me as polonus and not a Pole. In a state of profound paranoia my subjects have turned the tables around and are watching me, watch them. When I finally beat some sense into my head and press the shutter, I invariably get in trouble. I am bereft of the impunity that comes with looking like a foreigner and I understand only too well the mumbled insults that follow. “Very tall and naked, noticed by everyone in Warsaw” is a hard place to be while attempting street photography in which 90% of success is determined by confidence with a minor mix of arrogance. The remaining percentile of skill sets requires the foot work of a tennis player and hyper awareness of a seasoned cabbie. “Owning the street” is an elusive state of mind, it is seeing without being seen. It is sensing the curb with your feet and being aware of the street’s traffic without looking. It is falling in step with the subject for that one click of the shutter.

On my return to San Francisco, I was greeted by full blown summer, interrupted since then by the city’s typical fog spells and coastal winds, yet bright California sunshine nevertheless. Traveling between 3 cities in a matter of 15 days accentuates the differences and individual character of each one. It appears that only now, 6 years into my stay, I’ve become able to recognize the typical San Francisco flavor. The bright full spectrum light intensifies the colors in my photos and makes street photography such thrill, precisely here. The block parties and uninterrupted string of outdoor events provide interest and focus to my shooting. The young and the young at heart who indulge in pursuits of happiness on their days off in free and uninhibited manner - are a treat to a street photographer hoping to get that one shot that is better than anything else she has taken to date. As my photoblog is approaching its 1000th post, unable, uninspired and unmotivated to head out, I reflected on my personal photographic experience, its joys and challenges and the unstoppable compulsion to keep shooting, during the 3 gloomy days under the grey Vancouver sky.

Filed under: Photography — Rolling Red @ 4:14 pm

10/19/2007

Narratives, fables, fabulae

Storytelling is as ancient as human history itself, a fact suggesting that it is therefore an intrinsic process of our psyche. Stringing causes with effects, events and speculations, rumors and half truths - creating narratives is comforting. Our specie has the need to spin order out of chaos and to pluck a seemingly coherent story out of confusion. As humans developed over hundreds and thousands of years, so did our culture and complexity of our thoughts. Art, the outward expression of our inner selves, mirrors that process. Early societies had fables, folk stories and religious tales. We have deconstruction and oulipo. This is the reason I find myself at odds, grimacing slightly whenever traditional storytelling is extolled. It has its place, merit and beauty however, my appreciation for it has been tamed by the pleasures derived from reading and viewing highly conceptual works. Being presented a partial image, a slice of a situation, a stark contradiction without further detailed explanation, without a final resolution is more satisfying. It engages our minds, has us fill in the blanks, causes us to participate more fully.

Striving to tell stories through images seems particularly superfluous. After all a visual medium aims to please ocular senses in principle. Great photographs, paintings or drawings are intensely pleasing on the merit of their form alone. The delight at harmonic composition, vivid colors or subtle tonal gradations is viscerally palpable. Images by Dave Hart whom I am happy to know personally, are an example.

Conscious of this personal bias, I am forever attempting to measure how much “form” and how much “content” makes a photograph, or a visual essay, a successful one.
Jon Torgovnik
, one of the laureates of this year’s Getty Images Grants for Editorial Photography presents an antithesis in his story about the Israeli Reserve Soldier. Jonathan writes:

This project looks at the face of the reserve soldier in the Israeli army, both as soldiers and civilians. Every person portrayed in the project was photographed twice. One portrait was taken while they were active in reserve service, mostly in the West bank and Gaza. The second was taken while in their civilian life, after they completed one month of duty.

The format of the essay is that of two snapshots placed together side by side. The subjects are positioned in front of the camera in a straight forward facing stance, aware of being photographed. The depth of field is in the medium range, enough to have the subject stand out yet providing plenty of recognizable context. Natural light and outdoors setting is preferred. Here images cede priority to content. In magnificent reversal, the photographic medium becomes the typography of the story, the pictures being the type by which means the narrative is told.

Pulitzer.org has a recorded time line going back to 1917 and since 1995 posts the winning works online. The 2007 prize for breaking news photography was awarded to Oded Balility. In the photo:

“A lone Jewish settler challenges Israeli security officers during clashes that erupted as authorities cleared the West Bank settlement of Amona, east of the Palestinian town of Ramallah.”

The image is disarming in its excellence. It is an example of inseparable form and content captured and fused together in an instant. The woman’s place in the picture, the volume of armed men confronting her, the long line of onlookers framing the image, the ribbons of smoke flowing against them all serve as strong graphic elements which make the image visually pleasing. It is the same exact elements which have quicksilver quality and lead us to inescapably thread a clear narrative plot.

The emerging observation from this brief exercise is that narrative often referred to as “content”, is greatly dependent on the graces of its medium. The formal body, whether by striking presence or subservient recidivism has the power to give flight or cripple a story. Poorly told, even the most interesting plot does not escape the confines of remaining strictly a good idea. Good form, on the other hand, by virtue of its constructional beauty can be appreciated on its own. Therefore, while “good stories” are commonly glorified, this modest entry is a tribute to form.

Filed under: Art, Photography — Rolling Red @ 12:47 am

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