It's a human condition. When we see something every day it becomes mundane. It's like those people that live in Hawaii with their bumper stickers that say "Ho hum, another boring day in paradise".
The art of life is to see with fresh eyes in our daily existence.
I would like to reactivate this thread in order to dedicate it to Ara Güler, a great photographer who I just discovered.
I have bought his book about Istanbul (with a foreword by Orhan Pamuk) and am currently reading a few interviews, articles etc. I am touched by his approach, as well as by his life story. It has helped me to better define who I want to be as a photographer.
I am collecting data and will try to write up a summary of his approach and philosophy.
Well, technically you didn't, so that probably explains in part why you forgot about it. But please feel free to revive it and add more content as you uncover more of Güler's work and life!
The eye of Istanbul as he's been called.
He has a good thing in his photography, which I always appreciate. You can easily choose the photos that stand out. Not something you can say for the majority of photographers. Naturally, most of his photos are uninteresting but every once in a while pops some photo and you say "wow that's good".
I said naturally because I think every good photographer has some boring, good, very good, excellent, and mastepiece photos. Since I believe a photograph is very difficult I don't expect that some photographer in his (non-curated) body of work will have most of the photos to be great. That's not a critique I think is something normal, someone can't produce masterpieces every day he goes out photographing.
If you want in the next post I will point to you the one photos that in my opinion are good from a first look on his webpage
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.