Coyote Valley Oaks, Twilight. Santa Clara Valley, California. January 1, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell. (Sales)
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Staying artistically fit in 2007
Karl Zipser at Art & Perception:
Staying artistically fit in 2007
Thanks to my New Years resolutions, I took my camera on my walk this morning. Making photos every day — what’s the big deal? Photography is just a matter of pressing a button, right?
I did the same walk around the harbor that I do every day when I am in Wilhelmshaven. But today I felt exhausted afterwards, and it wasn’t from the physical weight of the camera. I felt tired because I used my “photographic vision,” a special way of looking at the world. It took about half an hour of walking and shooting to get into “photographic vision,” and it now persists for some time after I put down the camera. “Photographic vision” lets me take photographs without using a camera, in a sense. I assume all the photographers have this; probably the professionals live with it all the time. For an amateur like me, it yields a sort of “mental muscle ache” something like what you feel when you first start exercising muscles that you didn’t realize you had. All the more reason for the daily workout!
– Karl Zipser [Art & Perception]
Yes, Karl, yes. :-)
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Young Aspen Tree, Conway Summit
Young Aspen Tree. Near Conway Summit, California. October 8, 2006. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell. (Sales)
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Pacific Sunset, Windy Hill
Pacific Sunset, Windy Hill. San Francisco Bay Area, California. December 30, 2006. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell. (Sales)
The Story: My end-of-year photograph, made near Windy Hill along Skyline Road between the southern San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean.
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