Traditionally, as December draws to a close, I like to review my photography and the journey I have taken over the last 12 months.
This year I have spent a lot of time thinking about my inspiration and motivation and the drivers which lead me to make the images I make.
For me photography is as much about interacting with the environment as it is about producing good images. As human beings our relationship with the outdoors and connection to the natural world is vital to our sense of fulfillment. We need to get outside, to breathe fresh air, take in the view and marvel at our place in this world. We need to do these things to feel alive but I also think that from a photographic point of view we need to do these things to connect and have empathy with our environment. Surely this is the only way we can capture great landscape images. How can we possibly hope to convey a landscape in all its glory if we are not fully connected with it?
For me photography provides a reason to get outside. We live in an age where our relationship with the natural world is diminishing. The fast pace of life has taken its toll and there never seems to be enough time to just be and enjoy our surroundings. Without my love of photography I would have missed so many wonderful things; beautiful sunrises, stunning sunsets, the ebb and flow of the tides and the changing of the seasons. These are all things that have enhanced my life, things that are available to everyone, but which many of us fail to take advantage of. For most these wonders of the natural world go un noticed, burried in a never ending cycle of work, stress and commitment.
I have realised over the last few months that my photography has improved the greater my connection with the environment and equally the more I photograph and observe a landscape the greater my connection to it becomes.
My inspiration has come from many locations but none more influential than Ramsholt on the River Deben, a place I shared with my family for several years. This location shaped my photography; I came to know it really well, I documented it through the seasons and watched the wildlife come and go. I grew to love the landscape, the light, the changeable weather and the flora and fauna. I noticed and observed and channelled all my feelings for this place into my image making.
I was reading a book the other day by Richard Louv which contained the following quote which sums up my attitude to photography and the outside world - "We cannot love what we do not know and we cannot know what we do not see."
Perhaps if we all examined our connection with the natural world we would find our outdoor photography improved as our knowledge of our environment grew. We may also feel a growing sense of fullfillment and a renewed fascination with the world around us and that has to be good for our photography and the future of our environment.
In 2013 I will be introducing a new e - course based on this very subject. It will cover how we see our environment, how we interact with it and how we can channel this into emotive and inspiring image making. If you are interested please contact me for more details.
Hi Gill
ReplyDeleteA very interesting read accompanied by some stunning images, I look forward to seeing your 2013 work.
Phil
Thanks Phil. I have lots planned for the new year so I am hoping 2013 is going to be an exciting time - if it ever stops raining that is! I hope you are managing to get out and about with your camera and your various projects are going well.
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