An evolution in photography – Chapter One – Wearing glasses made me blind

I don’t recall the first time I used a camera but I do recall my first camera: a Minolta X-700 and I got it in the early 1990′s. I was very fond of that camera and it taught me the basics of shooting. I never formally studied photography, but rather used books and trial and error to understand what I was doing with the camera and the images I got.

Right from the beginning, I was more interested in seeing things around me (mostly nature) rather than using the camera to create magical images. I certainly played around with the camera to achieve some fancy looking shots, but it was just playing. Basically, if I had my camera with me, I would spend more time looking so my camera allowed me to see and study nature. Which was great because I had just finished my BSc in Zoology.

Somewhere along the way I developed a strong interest in marine mammals and this took me and my camera to remote parts of the world to study them. My interest in photography was very clear from the start, in that I was using the camera to simply document what I saw, even though I often didn’t know what I was looking at.

And so this is how my photography began. I simply took photographs of things I saw in nature. I didn’t really understand anything about looking though, and my approach to capturing images was aggressive (completely driven to capture something without spending any time to look at it), slapstick (no standard approach), documentary (boring shots of nature) and often what I saw did not end up on print (because I wasn’t looking).

Damn those stupid glasses…

 

 

An evolution in photography

Several years ago I wrote an entry in my blog on how my photography has changed over the years, from my first memory of using a camera to present day. Many aspects of my life and many people have contributed toward my journey in photography.

I thought I would post these entries again for people to read and also to remind myself of where I came from. Unfortunately, the original entries are somewhere in lah lah internet land, so I will re-write the entries and provide a fresh perspective.

Every Tuesday I will post a chapter, starting tomorrow, 28th February 2012.


Quiet moments on Sable Island

My time on Sable Island is busy, with much to do during the day; searching for seals that have returned to the island with their satellite/GPS tags to breed, capturing those seals to retrieve instruments, collecting life-history data, assisting with maintenance, camp chores, and so on. So, my mind is engaged in the research while on the island.

However, during each day I make an effort to clear my mind of this clutter and look. Sometimes, I don’t see much and another times I see lots. Here are a few images from those times of looking:

Street photography: week forty-five

“See the characters but create your own plot” – Martin Kollar

 

Street photography: week forty-four

Now that I have returned from Sable Is., I can continue with the street photography posts, each Friday. Enjoy!

Be joyful! Dance in the street.” – Munem Wasif