Noticing Little Things
Saturday, April 27, 2024
| Hosta 'Snake Eyes' & Dahlia 'Hypnotica White' - 27 April 2024
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I photograph to see what things look like photographed. Garry Winogrand
I started taking photographs in 1958. Nine years ago I
bought my first digital camera. I now use both film and digital cameras.
Then there is my scanner. I call myself a scanographer and
my scans are scanographs. I began in 2001. I have now amassed at least 3000
plant scans. Of late I have scanned objects on my scanner. This means that I am
doing table-top photography with a scanner. Argentinismo on a scanner
Winogrand was famous for that quote about photographing
things. It is obvious that when I scan plants I may have an idea of what they
will look like. But there is always more in the process. I am always pleasantly
surprised.
For reasons I ignore we never had dahlias in our garden.
It may have been a Rosemary oversight even though she was a thorough gardener
with many interests. I have been buying them and putting them in little pots.
Going to my thoroughly accurate Blogger blog search engine
I have found out that I have written of dahlias only once. The lovely quote
from Spanish, “saludar con sombrero ajeno” (saying hello with someone else’s
hat) applies to that dahlia blog as I cut a neighbour’s spent flower. A spent dahlia & my existential angst
Now here you can see a pristine white dahlia. I knew
instantly that I wanted to pair it with a hosta leaf. This I did and I believe
that result is pleasant.
I cannot understand why nobody that I know in Vancouver
(or in my circle of photographer friends) why they don’t understand the wonders
of a scanner. Winogrand lived in a time where there were no scanners. What
would he have made of my efforts? When I scan my plants (and my Rosemary's plants) I fondly remember her looking closely at her plants. She could bend her limbs in any position. She would notice the little details of plants. She may have been a walking, sentient scanner. I salute her for teaching me to notice little things
Argentinismo on a Scanner
Friday, April 26, 2024
I have written at length here about the influence of Joan
Didion in my life and particularly this quote of hers: "I write in order to find out what I am thinking."
But of late I have discovered through my use of my Epson
V700 Photo flatbed scanner that there is another way besides in my writing.
Since 2001 I have been scanning the flowers (many roses)
and plants from our garden. The idea was to record at 100% size an accurate
representation of the plant. I may have now 3000 of these. When some of my roses
would die I felt that in some way my scan of them meant that my memory of them
was almost like having them in actual fact in my garden.
In the last few years I have been placing objects (not
only negative, slides and photographs) on my scanner and using it as a table top photograph ( a term from that last century).
But today, 26 April, 2024 as I was on my bed getting
ready to turn off the lights I came to this idea that my scanner is somehow
ordering my thoughts.
This scan is all about the fact that I am an Argentine.
In it there is my father’s 1930 mate with its bombilla, my father’s Argentine
flag, my Argentine identity document when I left Buenos Aires for Mexico City
in 1953, my Argentine draft document, my portrait in my winter Argentine Navy
uniform (taken by my friend John Sullivan) and finally the facón (gaucho knife)
given to me by my navy pals when they knew I was going to return to Mexico
where my mother lived in Veracruz.
So in one scan an almost whole memory of my time in
Argentina in a neat package. I can now go to sleep having found out how I
think.
Memory is Complex
| 1951 - Susan Stone right, Alex left with gun | | | |
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| Rosemary & Niño - 3 March 2020
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When I was 8 I was interested in girls without knowing
exactly why. There was a girl in school I especially liked called Susan Stone. Her
father was the general manager of General Motors Argentina. He would send a
Cadillac to pick me up to take me to their spacious mansion so that I could
play with his daughter. It was there where I saw my first television set. At night I would turn off my lights with the intention of
thinking about Susan. Since the idea of sex or anything related to a woman was
not in my imagination my thoughts involved nebulous ideas of sitting next to
her and watching her smile at me.
Now if you get into bed with the idea of thinking about
someone (I do this daily in relation to my Rosemary) what is it called? It
cannot be a daydream? Thoughts that come to your head as you are about to sleep
what are they called?
My Rosemary often told me that I lived in the past. Consider
being a man in a family and you are an engineer and not a photographer. What
are your memories? Borges often said that in order to remember you have to
first forget.
In my case I am surrounded by framed portraits of my family and
of my past life. I have thousands of negatives and slides of all that. I am
constantly finding negatives of Rosemary and our daughters that I have almost
no memory of having taken. When I see these what do you call what you might
remember about them?
As I see it I have memories (memories that I can urge myself
to go back to) and I have the memories of looking at photographs and
remembering (or not) when I took them and the circumstances.
The term photographic memory is used to signify a very good
memory. Somehow I have another version
of this that I would also call a photographic memory.
How does this photographic memory of mine affect my daily
life?
I turn off the light. The cats get close to me. I notice the
empty spot on my right on the bed. I don’t have to force myself to remember how
it was when Rosemary was alive and there. I can remember that she never snored
and slept with her back to me. I can reveal that all I had to do was to touch
her back and she would know what it was that wanted and she would pull up her
nightie. I can remember that a few months before she died I would also turn my
back to her and I would cry (doing my best, but failing, that she would not
hear me).
As her death on December 9 2020 recedes, ever so slightly
from my memory, I can remember her voice well.
But I want to end this by asking myself that when I turn off
the lights and immediately begin to think of her, what is this kind of memory
called? Is it any different from turning off the lights, so many years ago, to
think about Susan Stone?
Memories happen without control. But what of memories that
one pushes to remember? Is there a difference with a random memory and one that comes from looking at a photograph that I took that is on my bedroom wall?
It would seem that the concept of memory is complex.
Beyond Pristine - Nothing Gold Can Stay
Thursday, April 25, 2024
| Hosta 'Autumn Frost' 25 April 2024
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Pristine
Mid 16th century (in the sense ‘original, former,
primitive and undeveloped’): from Latin pristinus ‘former’. The senses,
‘unspoilt’ and ‘spotless’, date from the 1920s. Nothing Gold Can Stay - Robert Frost
Nature’s first green is gold,
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf’s a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.
Since I can remember, just-bought new shoes, would
invariably, in short order, be stepped on by someone or some other way there
would be a nasty mark on its pristine surface. Nothing remains new for long.
Inevitably, a new car, with its special brand-new smell
will get a dent. That is the way for anything. That crying baby just out of the
womb will soon show the flaws of aging.
To see something that is flawless and pristine is an
experience that one remembers as a “first time”.
And so now in my Kitsilano deck garden my potted hostas
have that refreshing, bright (I will run out of adjectives her) pristine look.
They are unspoiled. They are yet to be bleached by bright sun or get holes from
nasty looking (even pristine ones now in early spring) slugs.
At the same time, while many who buy and collect antique
cars and restore them to perfection, might not understand the beauty of the
obviously not new. That is the case of the used Pentax S3 I purchased at Foto
Rudiger, on Venustiano Carranza Street, in Mexico City in 1962. Even then the
black paint coating had begun to rub off and the brass beneath could be seen.
There are many photographers who have been known to
attempt to age their black-painted film cameras. When my fellow photographers
see my Pentax they invariably smile and tell me how beautiful it is.
Is there something of this when we look at people? When I
first spotted my Rosemary from the back walking outside the school where I was
working (I did not know she worked there also) and saw her lovely straight
hair, that very short dark blue mini-skirt and those legs, and those legs! I
was dazzled.
Then when 2020 came around when she would get up from our
bed I did not notice how gravity had affected her body. Why?
Because she was like my Pentax S3. She was lovely.
That Chlorophyllograph Framed
This blog is the second one that represents and essay that I
will tape in back of the framed inkjet print of Rosemary and Alexandra (1969)
done as a chlorophyllograph. My North Vancouver photographer Ralph Rinke
inspired and taught me to do a b+w inkjet transparency and to mount it on a
hosta leaf in summer sun. The leaf is tightly clamped between a backing and
glass. I left this one four hours in the sun. The chlorophyll and the sun left
the image. Rinke believes that even in protection from sunlight in a home, the
image begins to fade. Thus I placed the hosta leaf ( Hosta ‘Paul’s Glory’) on
my mother’s red Mexican rebozo. Rosemary and I used to go to a nearby store
called Hob where they had quality used stuff. It was there where be bought this
frame (cheap it was) and many more. Of late I am trying to use them all up. My
daughters will either have to quietly decide who gets what or…. I hope they don’t
fight over them.
Because this is a chlorophyll print, I call it a
chlorophyllograph which makes me a chlorophylographer.
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