Undoubtedly though, whether it be a Fri/sat/sun morning, by mid afternoon Ive got 4 negatives, freshly developed, washed, and hanging while they dry. By the following morning Ive often got 4 finished platinum/palladium prints hanging on the drying line from the previous days outing. The stack of prints is turning into a coherent and rather intimate portfolio of the beauty Ive discovered in this old cemetery, one that holds a rather strong connection to my heart. [/I]
... if you revisit the same subject, it will of necessity, force you to find new pictures there. ... if you were to, say, photograph all the sculpture gardens in Texas... you may find that you are repeating yourself visually. It's an easy thing to fall into, and the work won't have the depth.
Nice to hear thoughts from others and to hear that I'm not bat sh#t crazy in my train of thought
Would be very interested to hear the flipside of this.
I don't travel much. The times I have traveled were long before my photographic pursuits. Since diving into photography I've spent damn near all my time in the state of Texas. Oddly enough, I don't hold much desire to travel, and when I do get the chance to leave for a week or so, I head to locales still within texas, but rarely able to visit (big bend area and such).
I was in Massachusetts for the holidays this past xmas. That was the first time, since I began shooting LF/ULF, that I had travelled out of state with my camera. I enjoyed it immensely, but oddly enough, the images I created did not feel as though they were mine.
Lots of people travel and do photography, makes me wonder the mindset and flipside to the discussion. Its a point of view that I have intense difficulty grasping.
In my initial post, I fully admit that it is one-sided, as it should be. Since it was merely from my point of view. Would love to hear from anyone that feels strongly about the ability to create truly personal work even when in unfamiliar territory.
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