‘dawn’ by richard siken

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❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

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@cat-kingery
‘dawn’ by richard siken
Fauna, Richard Siken
—Richard Siken, from “I Had a Dream About You,” Crush
By Samantha Cavet
Blog 3: the Photographic Essays
The photographic essay ties together a sequence of pictures to tell a story or to convey a single theme. In the 11th chapter of his book, Kobre discusses the different approaches that a photographer can use when developing a story idea. One of these approaches is the documentary reporting method, which is the style of photography that I will use for my photo story.
The documentary approach captures a real moment which usually conveys a message about a particular person, place, thing or idea.
The photo story that has inspired is Bruce Davidson’s “Brooklyn Gang,” which focuses on a group of teenage gang members living in New York City during the 50’s. Davidson spent several months with this group of outliers and documented their day to day lives.
The correlation between the subjects of Davidson’s photo story and the 1950s is very interesting to me. Back then, these rebellious youths were considered social outcasts, so for Davidson to document this was considered taboo. Through the use of photography, Davidson told the story of a group of troubled youths who were products of a broken family, and shortly thereafter had become involved in money trouble and drugs.
Davidson’s social commentary about a group of Italian-Catholic youths in Brooklyn shed more light on a little known demographic of American society.
Keep reading
“To create, I've destroyed myself. I've so externalized myself on the inside that I don't exist there except externally. I'm the empty stage where various actors act out various plays.
I've created various personalities within. I constantly create personalities. Each of my dreams, as soon as I start dreaming it, is immediately incarnated in another person, who is then the one dreaming it, and not I.”
— Fernando Pessoa, The Book of Disquiet
Filmmaking Wisdom from @poetsofcinema, an Instagram page dedicated to Andrei Tarkovsky and Robert Bresson.
I get francesca Woodman.
Edward Hopper, Interior (Model reading), 1925
photos taken by me, somewhere in the middle of nebraska
The Waste Land
I was neither
Living nor dead,
and I knew nothing,
Looking into the heart of light,
the silence.
—
T.S. Eliot
fleeting feelings
Mount Rainier National Park, WA by Conner Denny