warden
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I like Gossage too. His work reminds me of some work by Robert Adams who I also admire. I did some poking and found that Adams has written about Gossage, and the article is so on-point that it could be read as Adams writing about himself.
If you've captured Adams's attention, you are a good photographer. Below are two too long sentences from Adams about Gossage's classic book, The Pond:
"Though one grants innocence to everyone at certain stages in their lives, the sense one gets from the kind and placement of the trash around Gossage’s pond is that it wasn’t necessary to put it there, and the effect of doing so could not have been completely unanticipated; a few of the culprits may have been only willfully ignorant, but most were surely worse – those of us (I think we all do it, with varying degrees of indirection) who disfigure the landscape as a way of striking at life in general. It can be argued, justly, that society has helped people – particularly the poor – hate life, but the fact is that there is one extreme that is impermissible, not matter what the provocation, and that is a hate so unfocused that it takes in everything – the kind of wholesale detestation that is implied, for example, in the breaking of a tree for the pleasure of seeing it broken."
https://www.americansuburbx.com/2013/02/john-gossage-john-gossages-the-pond-1986.html
If you've captured Adams's attention, you are a good photographer. Below are two too long sentences from Adams about Gossage's classic book, The Pond:
"Though one grants innocence to everyone at certain stages in their lives, the sense one gets from the kind and placement of the trash around Gossage’s pond is that it wasn’t necessary to put it there, and the effect of doing so could not have been completely unanticipated; a few of the culprits may have been only willfully ignorant, but most were surely worse – those of us (I think we all do it, with varying degrees of indirection) who disfigure the landscape as a way of striking at life in general. It can be argued, justly, that society has helped people – particularly the poor – hate life, but the fact is that there is one extreme that is impermissible, not matter what the provocation, and that is a hate so unfocused that it takes in everything – the kind of wholesale detestation that is implied, for example, in the breaking of a tree for the pleasure of seeing it broken."
https://www.americansuburbx.com/2013/02/john-gossage-john-gossages-the-pond-1986.html
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