My article, “Photography and Luck” appears in this month’s edition of Extraordinary Vision Magazine, available for iOS and Android platforms for free. This is a great photography publication that features images and writing by a wide range of photographers.
NOTE: June 4, 2020. I have been informed that the app mentioned above may no longer be available. You can still find the article here on my website:
G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist whose subjects include the Pacific coast, redwood forests, central California oak/grasslands, the Sierra Nevada, California deserts, urban landscapes, night photography, and more. Blog | About | Flickr | Twitter | Facebook | Google+ | 500px.com | LinkedIn | Email
(“A Photograph Exposed” is a series exploring some of my photographs in greater detail.)
I have never been shy about admitting the role that luck plays in producing effective photographs of many subjects, and especially photographs of the natural world. Vision and knowledge and experience and planning and all the res are important, but we kid ourselves if we imagine that we are in control of our subjects to any great degree. The topic came up in a recent forum discussion, so I thought I’d share an edited version of my response here.
I can tell you with certainty that luck plays at least some role in many, if not the majority, of my landscape photographs. It is not the only thing, and preparation of all sorts is critical, but in the end almost every photograph depends on conditions and circumstances that are largely not in our control. I’ve written quite often at my blog about the sudden unanticipated appearance of magical light or atmosphere, snap decisions to go there instead of here, showing up in a place to find the key element that I could not have predicted, and random decisions that led (or not!) to special photographs.
The following photograph is one of my favorite illustrations, though I could use scores of other photographs to make the same point.
(To make the story even wilder, I ended up with three images of this scene, among which I still have a hard time selecting a favorite.)
So, how did this photograph come about? It sure looks like it must have taken some planning to get that individual fisherman posed in front of the stupendous winter surf, right? Or else some serious Photoshop trickery ? No, on both counts.
One morning I decided to photograph at Point Lobos along the Central California coast – a bit less than an hour and a half from where I live. Why Point Lobos on that day? It is hard to say for sure since even though I knew that high surf was possible, I could have gone to many other coastal locations to find it. It is a place I photograph often, but so are at least a score of other locations within the same radius of my home. So, for no clear reason that I can articulate, other than it is one of the places I like to shoot, I headed that direction.
I got there too early, and the park entrance was closed. I pulled up to the entrance, joining the short line of cars waiting for the gate to open, and figured I’d wait. As I sat there, I realized that I might just as well go drive around and see what else I could find while waiting. So I started the car, made a u-turn, and returned to highway 1, the Pacific Coast Highway. Should I go left (north) or right (south)? No idea. Oh, what the heck, I guess I’ll go south. (Less traffic to worry about when turning right onto the highway…) Continue reading A Photograph Exposed: Photography and Luck→
Photographer and visual opportunist. Daily photos since 2005, plus articles, reviews, news, and ideas.
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