using the power of now in photography
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Photography and The Power of Now Ben Evans
Photography relies upon the passing of time. We choose a moment and
sometimes its duration too. A long enough shutter speed de-familiarises time,
blending its minutes and hours into a single frame quite unlike anything we've
seen with our naked eyes.
ike fish contemplating water, !ime is peculiar if we think about it. Advanced
photography is as much about understanding and e"plaining the world as
capturing it. And in the same way that a portrait can shine light on a person's
character, so a camera can be a tool to e"plore and discover the nature of
time.
#ckhart !olle, author of the the Power of $ow has an intriguing relationship
with time. %e reminds us that the only e"perience we will ever have of time is
the present moment. We may have thoughts of the past, even be affected by
historical wounds, but they are &ust thoughts in this moment. %opes and fears
for the future may control us, but here we are still, right here in the 'now'.
!he present moment is life it is always okay, and it is always enough. !hose
interruptions and distractions( !hey're your life too. Alan Watts compared lifewith music the end of the song isn't the important bit)
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What has all this got to do with %olistic Photography( *'ll try and e"plain with a
story about the best series of photographs * never made.
+alella de Parafrugells is a small +atalan fishing village a few hours $orth of
arcelona. !he golden light of sunset was painting it even more beautiful as *
walked along the beach there last winter.
A pair of old old fishermen in traditional clothing were manoeuvring their
ancient boat into the deep blue sea. *t was a scene out of time, and * had
my antique %asselblad camera ready to preserve it.
A %asselblad was used to take the first photos on the moon, and mine is of asimilar vintage. *t works like clockwork but it works like clockwork)
o with no batteries, everything is manually controlled. +onfusingly, the
viewfinder shows an image that's reversed left-to-right.
* had to think about the light and choose the right shutter speed to freee the
scene. ut still show the movement while simultaneously thinking about my
aperture's depth of field and the effect my choice was having on my
e"posure. Which * had to guess based on e"perience.
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* also needed to focus the lens manually and frame the sub&ect on the other
side of where *'d put them on a normal d/. And all this while choosing the
'right' moments to e"press how * saw the world in those few minutes.
$ow *'m a bear of little brain, so * couldn't cope with each thing at once and
then an amaing thing happened.
0perating the camera became unconscious. And with my mind caught up
doing that, * felt incredibly connected with the scene and the present
moment. * had no thoughts of the past or future distracting my awareness,
and could watch my emotions ob&ectively.
* created a series of photographs of the boat being launched blue cigar
smoke backlit by the orange rays of sunlight. !he ploughed furrow of coarse
sand left in the keel's wake, taut muscles under sun-burnt skin, the tip and
splash and finally, the dot past the rocks.
* can't show you these photographs. !he camera, old dog that it is, never
made them.
ut * can see them clearly in my mind's eye. * haven't inherited my
grandfather's photographic memory, but something about an intense
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connection with the moment leaves an indelible mark. Perhaps it was this that
the /omantic poet Wordsworth was writing about in his poem, '1affodils'.
Photography starts as a way to capture, preserve and share your surroundings'here's me on my holiday in #gypt 2with the pyramids behind3', 'there's
+harlotte with the cows', 'this is the view from my new place', 'this is what
igma's new camera looks like'.
ut %olistic Photography can also be used to e"press your ideas and
emotions, using the world as material to do so. !he photographer has an
image in mind, then sets off with the camera 2and Photoshop)3 to find or
create it. !he intention is to create photographs that tell a story, show an
concept or e"press a feeling.
!hese two approaches - Preservationand Expression- guide us to create with
http455www.holisticphotography.com5.
* believe that e"pressing ideas and emotions can make photography an art
form. 6or e"ample, tielglit made a series of photographs which he called
#quivalents they were pictures of clouds - but they weren't about clouds he
wanted them to seem almost musical.
http://www.holisticphotography.com/http://www.holisticphotography.com/http://www.holisticphotography.com/ -
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#namoured by the idea that a photograph didn't have to be about the
sub&ect depicted, * thought e"pressive photography was a higher practice.
!urns out that they both offer rewards for the diligent, open-minded
photographer.
Practisinge"pressive photography puts you in touch with your emotions and
ideas. 7ou learn to recognise how the world affects your body and mind. 7ou
become more sensitive and thoughtful. Without wanting to sound 'woolly' *'ll
say that this approach to art deeply nourishes the soul and intellect.
Practisingpreservation in your photography sharpens your awareness of the
world around you. A camera is an ob&ective tool. earning how to anticipate
how a scene will look in a photograph before you press the shutter will forceyou to look at things ob&ectively.
6or e"ample, a lot of new photographers have preconceptions of the scene
in front of them. !hey generalise and see what they e"pect to see. !his goes
right back to childhood where we learned to associate caricatures with real
people and animals.
8eneralising helps us a lot in daily life but it is unhelpful for seeing things as
they really are.
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ooking at the world as it appears also means that we become more aware
of change. 6or e"ample, we start to notice the sun's arc across the sky so we
can understand how the shadows in our scene will shift with time. %ave a look
shadows move surprisingly quickly.
0n a shorter time-scale, and especially with people, even fractions of a
second can dramatically alter how your sub&ect appears. 9nless you're very
present to the moment, it's easy to miss these fluctuations.
!ry a series of photographs to e"plore how things change. !his might be a
drive-mode series of a galloping horse or a photo taken once a year of a
glacier. *t is worth putting them together in a time-lapse video if you have alot of them.
7ou can also e"periment with your shutter speed duration to see how
movement changes. Paying close attention to how things appear to you and
how they are changing brings your conscious awareness into the 'now'.
!olle suggests that to get in touch with the present moment, we can &ust sit still
and pay attention to our thoughts and sensory impressions. After a while, the
awareness may arise, 'if * am watching my thoughts, then there must be two
of me the thinking mind and the observing mind.'
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7our thoughts don't make you who you are. !he hagavad 8ita talks of your
body as a vehicle for your soul. Where does the body end and the mind
begin(
ut wait. *'m sure that our attachment to form and ego-based identity must
be beyond the scope of this photography article)
!he point is that unless you're in the habit, it can be tricky to watch your
thoughts and emotions without getting caught up in them. And your camera
happens to be an e"cellent tool to assist you.
tart to really pay attention to the world around you for what it is. 7ou'll find
that it's ludicrously challenging to stop identifying ob&ects for the names
you've learned for them 'my hand, 8eorge's happy face, this screen withcolours on'.
ut what you can do is to realise that ob&ects are unique. !hey e"ist reading
Albert +amus' book '!he tranger' will help e"plain this. tart looking twice at
things, at their form. Where are they in their time-scale from creation to
destruction(
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1oes such a time-scale e"ist at all for them or is it &ust a metamorphosis of
form and meaning( 1oes a broken chair with no legs cease to be a chair(
Photograph things as they are. 9se a macro lens to highlight certain details to
de familiarise them.
+hallenge the meanings you automatically attach to the things around you.
Watch them intently in the moment and you'll be amaed by how your
awareness e"pands.
Ben Evans is a Barcelona-based English Photographer who teaches photography classes in
Barcelonaand keeps a photoblog of fine art street photos of Barcelona at www.i-Barcelona.com.
Ben is the author of best-selling book, Photography !he "ew !hings #ou $eed !o %now, available
now for &&p at www.'reatBigBear.com. (e is working on two photography teaching
pro)ects, Better !han &* Percentand (olistic Photography.
(e shoots $ikon, (asselblad, +pple iPad and those little throwaway waterproof film cameras
with the plastic lenses.
http://www.englishphotographer.com/http://www.englishphotographer.com/http://barcelonaphotographycourses.com/http://barcelonaphotographycourses.com/http://www.i-barcelona.com/http://www.greatbigbear.com/http://www.betterthan90percent.com/http://www.holisticphotography.com/http://www.greatbigbear.com/http://www.betterthan90percent.com/http://www.holisticphotography.com/http://www.englishphotographer.com/http://barcelonaphotographycourses.com/http://barcelonaphotographycourses.com/http://www.i-barcelona.com/