Green Stems. © Copyright 2022.G Dan Mitchell.
Green stems of new bulbs crowd together.
Recently I read an article about painter Richard Diebenkorn, whose work I have admired for years. The reviewer was commenting on the relationship between the depiction of the “real” landscape and seeing the subject as something else entirely. He commented, more or less, that these paintings of real subjects aspire to abstraction. That’s an idea that I can relate to — and I know that I’m not the only photographer who thinks this way.
I made this photograph during a morning visit to a Bay Area garden, where we had gone to see the first “spring” blooms. (Technically, it was still late winter, but it sure felt like spring that day.) The flowers were beautiful and impressive. But my attention wanders, and I end up photographing a lot of other things, too. These stems caught my attention with their color and form, especially in softer light in the shade of some trees. So I crouched down (very!) low and photographed in such a way that the stems but not the flowers would be in the photograph.
G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” is available from Heyday Books, Amazon, and directly from G Dan Mitchell.
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