Description
Printed size: 17″ x 11″ and 24×16”
During the 1920’s and 30’s, Alfred Stieglitz photographed a series of clouds. He called them “Equivalents”. This title was based on discussions which often emerged at Gallery 291 in the previous years. They stemmed from Kandinsky’s theories, particularly the belief that colors, shapes and lines reflect the inner self, the emotional “vibrations of the soul”.Over the years I have been searching for that inner self through photography – a search which I know will never end. I believe that allowing instinct to play a major role in the photographic process is key in the creation of a free flow between the inner self and the photograph. This instinctive photography features very strongly in my work, both at the capture stage and also at the post processing stage. In this set of images (which will certainly continue to grow), I try to explore the “soul” of my surroundings, and my own, through a technique which on one end creates a layer of abstraction from the physical manifestation of things, and on the other end creates a collaboration between myself as a photographer and nature itself, by introducing that unknown, uncertain, or “random” factor into the image. Not having full control of the final image allows for a connection with our surroundings that is almost tangible and certainly real.