Plague Journal, Time Bandit
Walking about with my camera is satisfying. In my high school days I discovered the challenge of angle-of-view, light, and the framing of a camera lens, are elements of an art form that continues to fascinate. My first lesson in capturing a photo took place at a drag strip, with my father’s box camera in my hand. The shutter speed was 1/30th of a second, which is sufficient for capturing a black and white photo of a smiling family standing obediently for a group photo. For my purpose, capturing a super stock race car “wheels up” launching from the starting line, the shutter speed was, to say the least, slow. I learned techniques that helped overcome the camera’s shutter-speed limitation. Later in the darkroom at school I’d print out 8×10 black and white enlargements of the images which I’d captured.
A photograph helps to fix in memory a sliver of time, a time when the photographer was present “to capture” a ephemeral, passing moment. Memories fade, become unreliable. The image on screen or fixed by inkjet onto paper, is an artifact, a memorial to what is passing, or already has passed away. A photographer is a time bandit.
Roman emperors memorialized their acts by erecting statues, stone pillars, or temples — we have photographs.
I still have my father’s Kodak box camera.
It is midsummer. I particularly enjoy taking photos of blooming flowers. The forms and colors are ineffable. A flower’s purpose, among others of course – is to be looked at. They are metaphor’s of a certain type. If there is a question of what is meant by the term “red”…. Just look!
2 thoughts on “Plague Journal, Time Bandit”
Beautiful flowers….drove from home to Waubonsee Com. College today for a meeting. Had not made that drive since the pandemic. I had forgotten what a lovely ride it was…using back roads. It is lush and green as you drive by the fields of corn and more. We are so lucky not to be in a drought or a heat wave.🌼
Where would we be without good fortune? The natural beauty of the area is extraordinary.