Not everything we see is how it appears. Our minds play tricks on us with optical illusions hundreds of times a day but our brains are so efficient we never notice. But now I know they're there, I can't stop looking for them.
I remember walking to the subway one day about two years ago, and coming across a coworker from the game publisher/developer where I worked. He was stopped on the sidewalk, looking across the street, with his hands raised to form a rectangular frame. He was trying to understand the light and shadows on the walls of the buildings he saw. I asked him why, and he said as a video game level designer, it's part of his job.
I didn't really understand then; I just saw some shadows on a building. But thinking back to that day I remember there were light shadows and dark, triangles, rectangles, patterns, in a stunning composition formed by the setting sun and the buildings. That composition spawned an emotional response and made it unforgettable. Seeing the true composition of something is one way to make a photograph great.
I have a long way to go to master composition, but I'm enjoying seeing this way for the first time in my life. Or maybe that's not right. I'm not enjoying seeing this way for the first time because I've always seen this way; I'm enjoying understanding more about what I see.
Today I wanted to have a cat nap before I go out to take photos. I'm going to the Phyllis Rawlinson Park for another crack at architecture. This time, however, I'm going to follow a shape theme. Anyway, I went into my bedroom and lay down, and on my wall across the room was a fantastic shadow cast by the sun shining through some leaves and my window screen. The light was strong and the shadows crisp.
I started shooting, not realizing until I'd finished that my camera was on manual focus; I made a silly mistake and thought the low shutter speed, hand-held camera, and moving leaves were causing blur. So I almost missed the shot entirely, but managed to luck out with one image.
It's definitely abstract, but I'm thrilled with the lines, variety of tones, shapes and balance. I think it looks like Cerebus the Aardvark. Results may vary.
© Jeremy Buehler and Bug Noir (www.bugnoir.com), 2010.
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