"To compose a subject well means no more than to see and present it in the strongest manner possible." -Edward Weston
This post is the outcome of collaborative efforts by many fellow photographers whose creative spirit is exemplified in their unique depiction of the original photograph. Each person started with the same digital file. (see details of the challenge HERE) The multitude of interpretations is something to behold and very exciting to consider. Each rendering of the original image offers something new to the viewer. What is taken with the camera is often just the jumping off point of the final artistic expression. We can learn from each other's creative process. What are we bringing to the raw material? How do we go about pushing it to another level? What is our process? What are our thoughts that accompany the transformation of the image?
This has been so much fun to organize. I have been so inspired by your imaginative "remixes" and am very appreciative to all who participated. There is a wealth of very exciting ideas presented, offering much food for thought. Given the response to this project, I have decided to offer another round. Look for details which are contained at the end of this post. And now...
THE DRUMROLL....
(chronological order)
original unedited file
Wills Glasspiegel
Mark Regester
Adrian Davis
Aaron Hobson"walking the moose"
Jim Digby
J Wesley Brown
Chuck Mintz "They Threatened to Close Saint Colman's So We Moved it to the Sticks"
Mark Berndt
Paris Carter
Spencer Morehead
Emma Powell
Oliver Pauk
Tim Messick
Jim Robertson
Hank Frentz
Karen Divine
Karen Klein
Pamela Zilly
Bob Sachs
Shaun Quinlan
Rob Castro
Michael Werner
Joyce Westrop
Ellen Jantzen
Ilona Berzups
Dan Gerber
Kristianne Koch "What Path Will She Pick?"
Loretta Ayeroff
Mark Hickman
Erin O'Keefe
Tyler Hewitt
Frank Grisdale
NEXT
I would like to try this again as it has been so amazing to see the creative process in action.
I went thru my files and found another image that has many possibilities for interpretation. Feel free to work with the file that is on this blog or email me at photos@janefultonalt.com and I will invite you do download the larger file from my dropbox account. Then just return your rendition of the photograph to me by April 1st at 72 dpi, 1000 x 1000 pixels maximum, your name in the file and your website (if you have one) and I will post it.
Here is some advice on the creative process from Rainer Maria Rilke...
“Everything is gestation and bringing forth. To let each impression and each germ of a feeling come to completion wholly in itself, in the dark, in the inexpressible, the unconscious, beyond the reach of one's own intelligence and await with deep humility and patience the birth-hour of a new clarity: that alone is living the artist's life. Being an artist means not reckoning and counting, but ripening like the tree which does not force its sap and stands confident in the storms of spring without the fear that after them may come no summer. It does come. But it comes only to the patient who are there as though eternity lay before them, so unconcernedly still and wide.”
Once again, have fun with it!
This post is the outcome of collaborative efforts by many fellow photographers whose creative spirit is exemplified in their unique depiction of the original photograph. Each person started with the same digital file. (see details of the challenge HERE) The multitude of interpretations is something to behold and very exciting to consider. Each rendering of the original image offers something new to the viewer. What is taken with the camera is often just the jumping off point of the final artistic expression. We can learn from each other's creative process. What are we bringing to the raw material? How do we go about pushing it to another level? What is our process? What are our thoughts that accompany the transformation of the image?
This has been so much fun to organize. I have been so inspired by your imaginative "remixes" and am very appreciative to all who participated. There is a wealth of very exciting ideas presented, offering much food for thought. Given the response to this project, I have decided to offer another round. Look for details which are contained at the end of this post. And now...
THE DRUMROLL....
(chronological order)
original unedited file
Wills Glasspiegel
Mark Regester
Adrian Davis
Aaron Hobson"walking the moose"
Jim Digby
J Wesley Brown
Chuck Mintz "They Threatened to Close Saint Colman's So We Moved it to the Sticks"
Mark Berndt
Paris Carter
Spencer Morehead
Emma Powell
Oliver Pauk
Tim Messick
Jim Robertson
Hank Frentz
Karen Divine
Karen Klein
Pamela Zilly
Bob Sachs
Shaun Quinlan
Rob Castro
Michael Werner
Joyce Westrop
Ellen Jantzen
Ilona Berzups
Dan Gerber
Kristianne Koch "What Path Will She Pick?"
Loretta Ayeroff
Mark Hickman
Erin O'Keefe
Tyler Hewitt
Frank Grisdale
NEXT
I would like to try this again as it has been so amazing to see the creative process in action.
I went thru my files and found another image that has many possibilities for interpretation. Feel free to work with the file that is on this blog or email me at photos@janefultonalt.com and I will invite you do download the larger file from my dropbox account. Then just return your rendition of the photograph to me by April 1st at 72 dpi, 1000 x 1000 pixels maximum, your name in the file and your website (if you have one) and I will post it.
Here is some advice on the creative process from Rainer Maria Rilke...
“Everything is gestation and bringing forth. To let each impression and each germ of a feeling come to completion wholly in itself, in the dark, in the inexpressible, the unconscious, beyond the reach of one's own intelligence and await with deep humility and patience the birth-hour of a new clarity: that alone is living the artist's life. Being an artist means not reckoning and counting, but ripening like the tree which does not force its sap and stands confident in the storms of spring without the fear that after them may come no summer. It does come. But it comes only to the patient who are there as though eternity lay before them, so unconcernedly still and wide.”
Once again, have fun with it!