I have decided to start keeping some sort of a journal on my photography. That is what I discovered after accidentally finding Ted Forbes's The Art of Photography Youtube channel and his photography assignments:
https://youtu.be/JB0rtvtmdF8
The idea is to record the creative thinking and flow in some way, in order to reflect one's own work. However, I think I like to utilize modern digital format for it. Although, I much like handwritten journals and diaries, they does not allow such useful features as ability to search afterwards, with words in text and keywords. Moreover, digital text is superior because it makes it easy to copy (for example copying pieces of my own text from here to elsewhere), edit, and share.
On this article I focus on two ideas and topics that puzzled me after reading two challenge assignments where I am personally involved to. First one is Saturday Self-Challenge, where the challenge was to shoot patterns. And the other one is The Sunday Challenge, where the topic was no more and less but Art, and yes, definitely with capital A! So, the idea is to start my journal with these two concepts, and how they are related.
My very first approach was focused only on patterns, and especially patterns that appears in nature. To find some patterns, I went out to local cemetery to shoot barks of trees. I indeed got some rather interesting shots. But when reflecting what I got during that day, and after reading the photo assignment for The Sunday Challenge, I really started to wonder what we take as art, and what art is about. Definitely not the first time for me or anyone to think this, but the very crystallized idea I came out with, was that art is like balancing between repetition and being unique.
What somewhat every artist likes to be is unique. In other words, we all want to come up with something truly original, something that is never seen before. But there lies also a great risk of being way too alien to audience, to critics (including ourselves) and to the whole society. Our whole education actually aims to this. We try to learn how to copy patterns (phrases, images, techniques) that makes our input for the society similar enough to become recognized as a pattern within the larger cultural fabric. And yet we also need to get that piece of pattern look unique enough, to make it look like something new becomes discovered, and avoid for example risk of just copying others too much.
And when going through the images I took at the semetary, I noticed one shot, where I first noticed the "eyes" that I saw on side of an old spruce trees, trees where the lowest branches were cut some time ago. As a living creature we are learned (partly by repetition and copy, partly maybe because of DNA) to recognize such patterns as faces and eyes. In computer science this is called as pattern recognition, where the attempt is to make computers do the same for us: recognize common patterns for example on images. For modern people this can be useful for example in photography, to automatize the camera focusing based on face patterns. For the primitive animal inside of us the face recognition is important to help us recognize the both, the potentially dangerous creatures, and those that belongs to our own kind and especially the close ones (those that belong in to our pack/family).
Altogether this is somewhat also the reason why we especially get drawn to images where we recognize anything that looks familiar. It is very much based on this concept of pattern recognition. We become exited when we see a human figure in the picture. And this is probably because it trickers multiple things in our mind. We start trying to find out whether the figure is something (someone) we know, belongs to our pack, or is danger to us, or looks attractive. Then it also may provide us such values as possibility to identify with some of our own experiences in that image, and to reflect our own feelings and believes.
Then the opposite is probably a very non-figurative art where we find absolutely nothing familiar, except maybe some colors, or in a long run, similar works of abstract art. And there we approach the risk of becoming too original and alien. The majority of audience then just "don't get it".
Photography then is a very much as an art form of ultimate copying, and also an attempt to do things in some original way. Which then leads me back to the topic of this post. How to illustrate patterns and repetition creative and artistic way?
I will return to this topic later on, because the idea of a journal is not to say everything at once, but to record one idea at the time, like making a quilt (a pattern) out of small pieces.
Articles by Sami Serola (inactive)
Low angle
-
Long time ago I optimistically thought a good photographer can use any camera to take good shots. An…
-
06 Apr 2017
Switching back to Ubuntu
-
Today I had enough with tiny "tablet computing", went to PC dealer nearby, and bought a proper lapto…
-
07 Sep 2015
See all articles...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone (public). -
All rights reserved
-
475 visits
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the feed of comments related to this post
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sami Serola (inactiv… club has replied to Stormlizard clubSome people see the figures and patterns easy, some don't. I have had the ability always. As a child I recall staring an old map of Mediterranean sea and countries around it. And I saw it negative for some reason. Then the sea formed all kinds of creatures in my imagination.
Stormlizard club has replied to Sami Serola (inactiv… club.... and the english translation is bad like all times.
Only 2 sentences here and now (includes ALL photographers chance AND dilemma)
.... that art is like balancing between repetition and being unique.
.... Photography ... is a very much as an art form of ultimate copying, and also an attempt to do things in some original way.
Sami Serola (inactiv… club has replied to Heidiho clubAnd "pardon my English" =P =)
(my english is a much bigger disaster than yours !)
Yesterday I visited an exhibition, organized by the "German Photographic Society" -
100 best german photographs of the year 2016. - Every piece: unique, breathtaking, ART.
In the end I felt enthusiastic, surprised and depressed - all in one.
So your text here exactly touches the main point: HOW to find an original, unique way to express "your inside out" ... a way NOBODY do it like yourself. You know, there are some artists - here and in similar platforms too, they got their own, unique way. You don't need to read their names - you SEE the picture, and say "oh, it's from XYZ !"
Here's an example, made me thinking about so much.
Because: the idea behind is simple. Everybody is able to copy it.
What is ART ! What is plagiat ? When art starts and finishes ?
... put some blossoms into milk .... and I promise, you will get a lot of stars in Flickr and so on.
... this photo is made as an "commissioned work". Named "Milchbauernmisere".
To protest against the EU's agricultural politics, to denounce misgovernment in milk price situation.
There's a difference behind. The idea made the picture.
You know, what I mean ...
Sami Serola (inactiv… club has replied to Heidiho clubAnd I really don't know the answer on how to become unique. Or if it even should be a goal. I have accepted I would stay as an amateur photographer forever. And therefore my goal is much more modest. All I seek is a playful point of view on photography. Way how images can be used in everyday communication.
Heidiho club has replied to Sami Serola (inactiv… club.... to say in german for "set one`s sight lower".
That being said, this is what makes photography, or any other art medium, a stimulating and positive pursuit. It makes you think of and explore your world in a way you don't usually do during day to day living. Whether or not you succeed in creating something "unique" and ''artistic", you still succeed in stimulating your mind with a new perspective. :-))
Sami Serola (inactiv… club has replied to ValfalThat is well said, Valerie! =) I suppose that should be the primary goal, just to challenge oneself to do just anything that activates the mind. Enough repetition, and maybe some day something unique comes out of it as well =D
Sign-in to write a comment.