Normally, you kill something if you cut it apart.
Not all experiences need systematic evaluation.
Normally, you kill something if you cut it apart.
Not all experiences need systematic evaluation.
I am in this camp for sureThat feeling comes when we stop consciously thinking so I don’t analyze it but, rather, just savor the experience.
Normally, you kill something if you cut it apart.
Not all experiences need systematic evaluation.
It usually happens very quickly for me. Kind of a shock of recognition, or as HCB put it, "Yes!". The word "stunned" comes to mind. It's something that is so right that all the elements come together, or coalesce. It's perceived as some kind of "perfection." Painting also does that for me.
I agree, part of the power comes that it resists systematic analysis or explanation.
But my purpose was to explore recurring visual triggers, that might also help us to understand more why some image affects us like that (especially if the same image produces this emotion to more than one of us) and not to kill the magic
In her current book Art Work, Sally Mann describes that visceral feeling as: "The trick is to eye things askance, in passing, in the liminal moments while thinking about your failed car inspection, and maybe, if you're lucky, one of the images will give you an unmistakable gut-flutter, an internal vibration like a tree full of starlings."
"I think I feel an orgasm coming on." --Brett Weston
"If you have to ask what jazz is, you'll never know." --Louis Armstrong
..... this “all things come together” might also read that if you try to crop or remove any element from the photo it falls apart.
For me, it doesn't work that way. It's not a situation where "a, b and c are present in certain degrees and then the feeling triggers." It's instantaneous and physical. I could try to explain it afterwards (since there's no 'before' to begin with), but the intellectual explanation never cuts it. Which is to say, I could take the post-hoc identified criteria and apply them to an abysmal image and they'd still be there, but not the physical response.Have you ever tried to think about this feeling in a more systematic way? What are the qualities that for you tend to trigger it?
The whole essence is that it resists systematic analysis.part of the power comes that it resists systematic analysis or explanation.
For me, it doesn't work that way. It's not a situation where "a, b and c are present in certain degrees and then the feeling triggers." It's instantaneous and physical. I could try to explain it afterwards (since there's no 'before' to begin with), but the intellectual explanation never cuts it. Which is to say, I could take the post-hoc identified criteria and apply them to an abysmal image and they'd still be there, but not the physical response.
Why do you find someone attractive - is it because of their symmetrical face? Maybe that's part of it, but not everyone with a symmetrical face will be attractive to you. There's a lot going on all at one.
I don't you can really explain the phenomenon of a couple of million neurons firing in a non-deterministic fashion to a complex set of internal & external stimuli. It just "is".
The whole essence is that it resists systematic analysis.
Explain the taste of an orange to me.
Explain the color blue.
Explain how an orgasm feels.
You can't, but we can all relate to the experience.
Not a whole lot. It works or it doesn't. Sorry, that's all I got.what would you say?
Not a whole lot. It works or it doesn't. Sorry, that's all I got.
I could list things I like about a photo. I cannot give causes why I come to like it.
Funny but this is exactly the philosophy of
It's not that odd. Most people you ask won't be able to give you much in the way of an explanation. Perhaps you expect more of one here, because we're all interested in photography.
More often than not, though, the shutter is released when we think "That looks good", "That looks interesting", "That looks right." with no greater insight into the scene than that. Then, often, you look through the results and just can't find what made you take the photo because perhaps the camera or our skill didn't meet the challenge - or perhaps it wasn't possible at all.
Maybe i was misunderstood but I didn't refer to the process of taking a photograph but rather looking at them (and photographs of others) afterwards.
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