Posts Tagged landscape
Evolution of my photography-Conclusion
Posted by Damian in Contemplative on May 6th, 2009
Part Four - Where I am cont.
This is the last post for this blog. The images to follow were all taken on Sable Island, NS after I had received training in Miksang. Hopefully, you will notice a difference in my style compared with the images in the previous blog.
This simple image portrays a strong sense of ‘horse’; curvature of the back, texture of the mane and the strong connection with the eye.
Simple yet strong images exist and with a little looking they can be seen every day, every where. This sand pattern on Sable stopped me as I drove along the beach on my ATV.
One of my favourite images for lots of reasons, mostly for its simplicity and the strong sense of time; there is a water droplet delicately hanging from the wire.
Through spending time observing rather than shooting with the camera different viewpoints of the same image appear. These sanderlings remind me of people wandering through a shopping centre.
This is another good example of what one sees when one spends time observing. I really like this.
Chogyam Trungpa in Dharma Art describes the experience of being relaxed and open when observing.
There is a standing-still quality, a stalement in which comments and remarks become unimportant, and seeing things as they are becomes the real thing. Its like a frog sitting in the middle of a big puddle, with rain constantly falling on it. The frog simply winks its eyes at each raindrop that falls on it, but doesn’t change it’s posture. It doesn’t try to either jump into the puddle or get out of the puddle.
This is how I felt when I took this photograph of the tree trunk. It was late in the day during a stormy, windy, wet and cold day. I was cold and tired and heading home but when I turned a corner I saw this image. It stopped me completely and I knew, despite the weather, I had to capture this. The image held me still and it seemed as though the stormy weather had dissapated. I really felt like the frog in the puddle.
Once one has performed the process of observing, discerning and finally capturing the image several times the processoccurs very quickly so that brief moments such as this one are seen and captured.
This is another good example of looking. I was on top of a dune watching an incredible sunset when I turned around to look east and saw this image. So simple and yet so much there, for me anyway. The delicate pink sky and face of the dune beat anything I saw in that sunset.
A sand bucket discarded on the beach. But woth wondeful patterns of sand.
A wonderful perception for me. Perceptions are of course truly personal.
This is a good example of how labels can affect your perceptions. These gulls are greater black back gulls. They are a nasty bird, attacking chicks in nests, pecking at the eyes of seal pups and quite common on Sable Is. This label would distract one from seeing their true beauty. Without the label a wondeful perception as this one can arise.
A simple broken shell on a beach.
To conclude, this quote from Henri Cartier-Bresson sums up my thoughts on photography.
My passion has never been for photography in itself, but for the possibility-through forgetting yourself-of recording in a fraction of a second the emotion of the subject, and the beauty of the form; that is, a geometry awakened by what’s offered.
Evolution of my photography – Part Four
Posted by Damian in Contemplative, Nature on April 26th, 2009
Part Four – Where I am
The images that follow were all taken on Sable Island, Nova Scotia. This is a 52km long wind-swept sand bar in the Atlantic Ocean, about 300km east-south-east of Halifax. The island is fascinating in that it has a long history including numerous ship wrecks and is home to a wild population of horses as well as other wildflife. I work on the island as a seal biologist and have been visiting annually since 1997.
The images here were all taken before I discovered Miksang, so prior to April 2006. Next week (4th May) I will post images from Sable Island after I took training in Miksang and hopefully you will notice a difference in my style.
Sable Island horses
Trunk in sand
After strong wind, various stuff is exposed from beneath the sand. This photograph is very simple and yet very appealing to my eye.
When I came across this male grey seal, there was a strong connection happening between it and the sea; a connection of home.
A sunset on South Beach. The colour of the sea, reflections on the wet sand and the break in the clouds inspired this photograph.
This mare stood still for several minutes while I photographer her.
This was taken at the end of a strong storm when the surf on South Beach was very impressive. The curvature of the sanderlings flying reminds me of a wave crashing on the beach.
This photograph sums up Sable Island. Seals on the beach, wild horses, dunes in the background and big surf. I was sitting on the beach photographing a pair of male grey seals fighting in the surf when this group of horses strolled down the beach toward me.
I have seen many sunrises and sunsets on Sable so one has to be very striking for me to photograph it. This one was because the colours in the wet sand were hues of brown rather than typical sunset colours of blue and reds.
Next week will be the end of this series when I will continue posting images but from the period after my Miksang training.
Evolution of my photography – Part One
I recently presented a talk to the Contemporary Arts Society on the evolution of my photography from when I began in the early 1990s to my present day work on Sable Island. The talk was very well received and was interesting to me too since it allowed me to see how my photography has changed and the elements that have shaped it.
This presentation will be posted on my blog in a series of four parts over four weeks: I. where I was, II. where I went, III. what I found and IV. where I am.
I. Where I was
My interest in photography began in the early 1990s after I graduated from University of Reading with a Bachelors degree in Zoology. From then to the present, my interest has been in nature photography. When I was not working I would visit places to photograph nature and landscapes.
I became very interested in marine mammals and this work took me to some wonderful and isolated places. I always had my camera with me and enjoyed shooting pictures of landscapes.
Often my photographs were of the wildlife I was studying.
Some images were indeed quite special and remain so.
I recall the process of shooting photographs. I would see something of interest, such as a nice light, and become very excited and focused on that aspect. My eye would be against my camera and I would shoot until I felt happy that I had the shot I wanted. I didn’t really engage myself with the subject because I was too keen to get the shot.
I found photography very rewarding and it took my mind away from everyday life. It was like an escape.
However, the process of capturing images was quite aggressive. After seeing something special and becoming excited I would focus entirely on getting the shot; the shot that would capture eveything I saw amd because what I saw was so special I would do anything to get it. I would become intensely focused on this task, such that not much else mattered at the time. I find this approach very aggressive and Iexperienced it with the people I photographed with. Further, this aggression seldom got the photo I wanted. What I saw was not always on the print.
I spent 15 years engaged in this process; being aggressive and frustrated. Nevertheless, I enjoyed it all!
Next week (13 April): Evolution - Part II. where I went




























