Lens-Artists Challenge #359: Tools of Photo Composition (Lines, Colors, and Patterns)

It’s John’s turn to host the Challenge, and his theme is ‘Tools of Photo Composition: Lines, Colors, and Patterns‘. ‘This week’, writes John on his blog, Journeys with Johnbo, ‘the challenge is to … find examples of photographs that feature compositional elements such as lines, patterns, or colors’. We’re on holiday at the moment, and our options are limited to roughly green (on our walk through the woods), blue (of the sea or the sky), and well, the light brown sandy colour of the beach.

Back in Lens-Artists Challenge #323, Egídio asked us to ‘explore how we see silence in photography’, and this led me to an introduction of the work of Hiroshi Sugimoto, a Japanese photographer and architect who has spent decades travelling the world and recording seascapes. ‘Every time I view the sea, I feel a calming sense of security,’ says Sugimoto on his website, ‘as if visiting my ancestral home; I embark on a voyage of seeing.’ Sugimoto’s images often portray the division of sea and sky with a sharp horizon line.

Sugimoto used a large format camera to create his seascapes, sometimes with images up to three hours long. All I have is my smartphone. He also used to present them all in black and white with no signs of human habitation. I’ve actually tried a couple with a bit of sand included, a nod to the compositional rule of thirds. The last image, though this is in colour, actually looks like it was made in black and white. The wonders of light.

Themes for the Lens-Artists Challenge are posted each Saturday at 12:00 noon EST (which is 4pm, GMT) and anyone who wants to take part can post their images during the week. If you want to know more about the Challenge, details can be found here, and entries can be found on the WordPress reader using the tag ‘Lens-Artists’.

If you are on Mastodon, you can now follow this blog directly. Just go to Mastodon and follow the ‘Snapshot’ WordPress account at @keithdevereux.wordpress.com. All new posts will be automatically updated to your timeline.

#Challenge #Composition #Horizon #LensArtists #Lines #Sand #Sea #Sky #Summerinmeco #323 #beach #LensArtists #praia #Sugimoto

This week I’ve been unashamedly lazy with my entry to the Lens-Artists Challenge. Circumstances have dictated that I can’t really get out this week, a combination of working on the house and the dull weather, but that’s given me an opportunity to review a few of my favourite images.

This week, Egídio of Capturing My World Through Brazilian Eyes was tasked with setting the theme for the Challenge and he has chosen, ‘Silence‘. Egídio discussed the work of American photographer Robert Adams, who has spent decades documenting the natural and urban landscapes of the United States. In the book of his work, American Silence, Adams captures what he calls ‘the silence of light’ and Egídio identifies themes of Environmental Change, the Subject, a Form of Protest and the Silence of the Viewer in Adams’s timeless images of urban sprawl, strip malls, highways, and the natural American landscape.

This week, Egídio asks us to ‘explore how we see silence in photography’, and for me there’s no better example than the beach. I’ve mentioned it before, but ‘our’ beach in Portugal, near the village of Meco, is accessible only by clambering down a cliff or from the beaches either side. As a result it’s relatively peaceful compared to the nearby beaches of the Praia do Meco or the resort beaches of Cascais towards Lisbon. For the past few years I’ve been documenting the beach from the top of the cliff in a minimalist style, recording an empty or near empty beach, the sea and the sky, which for me is the ultimate expression of silence. 

This past year I posted one of my minimalist images on social media and someone commented that it was similar to the work of Hiroshi Sugimoto, a Japanese photographer and architect who has spent decades travelling the world and recording seascapes. ‘Every time I view the sea, I feel a calming sense of security,’ says Sugimoto  on his website, ‘as if visiting my ancestral home; I embark on a voyage of seeing.’ Sugimoto’s images evoke a sense of serenity and silence, and I hope that my images of the beach might produce similar emotions in the viewer.

That said, I also feel that a more ‘violent’ landscape can also evoke silence and occasionally, when the clouds roll in, the serenity of the Praia do Rio da Prata is transformed into a kaleidoscope of light and shadow. 

So now, whenever we go to the coast I try to take at least one minimalist landscape of the beach, sea and sky. The featured image on this post is actually from our recent holiday to the Maldives and this was one of the few days that we were greeted with a near cloudless sky. The image below was also from the Maldives, taken from the speedboat as we were transported to the airport for our flight back to Portugal. I could never get over the blue of the sea and although we were deafened by the motors of the boat there’s still a feeling of serenity about the view.

Just to finish the post I have included an urban expression of silence, from the Estação de Oriente in Lisbon, taken as we were waiting for the train to take us home. 

Next week’s Challenge should be interesting. Patti of pilotfishblog will be proposing an ‘In The Details’ challenge, photographing a subject from three different perspectives and varying distances. Themes for the Lens-Artists Challenge are posted each Saturday at 12:00 noon EST (which is 4pm, GMT) and anyone who wants to take part can post their images during the week. If you want to know more about the Challenge, details can be found here, and entries can be found on the WordPress reader using the tag ‘Lens-Artists’.

If you are on Mastodon, you can now follow this blog directly. Just go to Mastodon and follow the ‘Snapshot’ WordPress account at @keithdevereux.wordpress.com. All new posts will be automatically updated to your timeline.

https://keithdevereux.wordpress.com/2024/11/04/lens-artists-challenge-323-silence/

#Adams #Agua #Areia #Beach #Blue #Challenge #Ferias #LensArtists #Praia #Sand #Sea #Silence #Sky #Sugimoto #Summerinmeco #Sunset #LensArtists

Lens-Artists Challenge #323 – Silence

Morning Haze(Fortaleza, Brazil) I recently found a YouTube video about renowned American photographer Robert Adams’s use of silence in photography. His deep connection to the concept of silence and…

Through Brazilian Eyes
Exploring a little minimalism. #BeachLife #Sugimoto #Minimalist #Maldives
After a few rough days the heavy waves have smoothed and cleaned the beach, leaving a ridge in front of the sea. With a fog drifting in it made for an interesting composition.
#ShittyCameraChallenge #BeachLife #Sugimoto
It was too windy to comfortably spend any time on the beach so we admired it from afar.
#ShittyCameraChallenge #Infrared #Sugimoto

In a welcome coincidence, my order of Japanese green teas from #Sugimoto Tea Company arrived the same day I tested positive for #COVID.

I just finished a pot of organic genmaicha … delicious!

I’m happy to say that my senses of taste and smell are working just fine, thank you very much.

And while my general sense of well-being isn’t what it usually is, the tea certainly helps.

As of this morning, I’ve finished the first day’s dosage (out of five) of #Paxlovid. Not much of a change yet!

“Göz alıcı aydınlık nesneyi ve metayı fazlasıyla gösterir […] Gölge ise karanlıkta hissedilmesi gereken saklı güzelliği, gösterişten uzak zarafeti, sadeliğin derinliğini, sükuneti getirir.”

—Esra Özdoğan’dan #Tanizaki’nin Gölgeye Övgü kitabı üzerine: https://manifold.press/tanizaki-golgelerin-gucu-adina

#EsraÖzdoğan #manifold #ManifoldPress #Sugimoto

Tanizaki: Gölgelerin Gücü Adına

« Göz alıcı aydınlık nesneyi ve metayı fazlasıyla gösterir. […] Gölge ise karanlıkta hissedilmesi gereken saklı güzelliği, gösterişten uzak zarafeti, sadeliğin derinliğini, sükuneti getirir. »

Manifold

Hiroshi #Sugimoto, The Electric Chair, 1994

#acab #police #brutality #state