Categories
Still Life

Woman Sketching Clay Bowls in a Museum

While visiting the museum, I stumble upon an intimate scene: a woman sits on a stool sketching bowls in a display cabinet, her reflection faintly visible in the glass. I’m not sure why I call this an intimate scene. We tend to think of intimacy as something that happens in the way that one person relates to another. How can we speak in relational terms of someone who is alone? Still, the scene feels intimate.

Can an image be quiet? I feel a quietude settle over this scene. In this quietude all I hear is the drawing of breath and the faint scratchings of a pencil on the sketch pad. If I’m quiet enough, maybe I can hear the noise the photons make as they bounce off the glass cabinet. I’m afraid to move in case I betray my presence by shattering the quiet. I’ve noticed that my running shoes tend to squeak on the museum’s polished wooden floors.

There is something about this woman’s close looking that deserves to be repaid in kind. Does she see the clay bowl the way a 3D scanning algorithm sees a clay bowl, mapping enough points onto the surface to replicate its shape, then wrapping it in a textured surface that reproduces the bowl’s colour, opacity, and reflectivity? Or does she see it organically, a living thing with a breath of its own? Or does she see it with her heart, using her pencil to capture the way the bowl makes her feel?

Capturing this image, I place it in a museum of my own making. I import it into Adobe Lightroom where I can easily read the meta-data, date and time (April 17, 2018), along with technical details (1/250 sec at f/1.4, 85mm, ISO 1600). In addition, I give it a label and description, just like an artifact in a museum (“Woman sketches ancient pottery in Toronto’s Royal Ontario Museum”). I finish by assigning it keyword tags to make it more readily searchable on any platform where I share the image.

Like a bowl dug from the earth and exhibited in a museum, I pull my image out of its natural context, put it on display, and do my best to protect it from the ravages of time. The timeless quality of museum exhibits is a fantasy, of course. One day, a catastrophic event will shatter the bowl. It might be something dramatic, like an earthquake. More likely, it will be something banal, like a careless curator who trips while moving the bowl. But long before the bowl meets its end, my image (made to support my personal fantasy of timeless creation) will succumb to digital rot, or hard drive failure, or format deprecation or whatever the digital equivalent of an untimely demise.

For the time being, I invite you to pause to relish the quietude, acknowledging that soon enough it will be gone.

Categories
Still Life

Snow-Covered Tulips

This is the final image in my February series of winter scenes: tulips covered in snow. I shot this last spring. In our area, there had been an unseasonably warm snap early in March and it brought the spring flowers on early. When that happens, there’s always the risk of a late frost or snow. Fortunately, tulips are waxy and thick and that makes them resistant to the cold.

To my eyes, this photo straddle states, half in winter, half in spring. It looks backward and forward. It is renewed life after the dead of winter. And, perhaps most importantly, it is a dozen different clichés all rolled into one image for your convenience.

Speaking of clichés. Tomorrow I begin a fresh month-long series of photos devoted to that quintessential of Canadian clichés: maple syrup. Join me in the sugar bush at Williams Farm in Tay Township, Ontario where we will tap trees, boil sap, bottle syrup, and say “eh” a lot.

Categories
Country Life Still Life

Minimal Winter Photos

One of the things I love about photographing in the wintertime is that if you angle your camera downward against a rising slope, you can isolate the subject and produce an absolutely simple shot. Call it what you like—minimal, clean, uncluttered, Zen—the effect is the same: an image that calms the spirit and settles the senses.

I wonder if Marie Kondo gives photography workshops. Declutter your images. Leave in only those parts that give you joy. It’s not surprising that a contemporary “influencer” of the uncluttered space should happen to be Japanese. Traditional Japanese aesthetics lists seven principles necessary to achieve Wabi-Sabi which is a state of mind that emerges in the presence of beauty. One of those principles is Kanso which means simplicity or clarity. Kanso might also be understood as a process to the extent that it engages us in the practice of removing things from the frame until only the necessary remains.

Snow helps in this process by removing clutter in the background. In the case of the photograph above, that clutter includes dirt, grass, and shriveled wildflowers. In the case of the photograph below, that clutter includes a pond and the line of the far shore, all of which has turned to ice and been covered by a deep layer of snow.

Cattails
Categories
Still Life

Life is but a dream

When I was a small child, my mother used to sing the well-known nursery rhyme to me:

Row, row, row your boat
Gently down the stream.
Merrily, merrily, merrily, merrily,
Life is but a dream.

According to the Wikipedia entry on this song, it made its first appearance in 1852.

Close on its coattails is the Lewis Carroll rhyme, an acrostic poem which spells Alice’s full name (Alice Pleasance Liddell) and ends with this stanza:

Ever drifting down the stream —
Lingering in the golden gleam —
Life, what is it but a dream?

The idea that life is indistinguishable from a dream is at least 2,500 years old, dating back to Plato’s Theaetetus, when early philosophers were first laying the groundwork for epistemology, the discipline that asks how it is possible to know anything for a certainty. (See the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy’s entry on the Philosophy of Dreaming for more.)

Most recently, we have witnessed a blurring of the lines between philosophy and neurobiology to further elucidate (or obfuscate) the problem. See Anil Seth’s latest book, Being You: A New Science of Consciousness. While he doesn’t specifically address this philosophical problem, his basic claim—that our perception of reality is a shared hallucination—clearly shows us which way neurobiology points. To the extent that both waking and dreaming are perceptual states we all participate in, they share in the basic features of all human perceptual states. Waking or dreaming, it’s all the same. Collective hallucination all the way down. Life is indeed but a dream.

Categories
Still Life

Pinhole Still Life

Still life of orange tulips in a turquoise vase

In the early days of Covid-19, after the WHO classified it as a global pandemic and local governments declared a state of emergency, I found myself looking for creative ways to use my camera. Certain of my habits–like street photography–were suddenly verboten and I had to do things that didn’t involve close interaction with other people. One thing I tried was setting up modest still life arrangements and photographing them with a pinhole attachment. Some people call it a pinhole lens but, technically, there is no lens, just a tiny aperture. Here, I taped together 3 white foam boards to create a simple background then placed my flower arrangement on a table beside a window. On an overcast day, the simple natural light was enough. The pinhole produces a soft dreamy effect, nicely matching my mood at the time when I told myself: this can’t be real.