Saturday, August 27, 2016

Book Review: Hoffmann, T. (2014). Photography as Meditation: Tap Into the Source of Your Creativity.

Hoffmann, T. (2014). Photography as Meditation:  Tap Into the Source of Your Creativity. San Rafael: Rocky Nook.

This a review of half a book.  I started reading it before a summer trip and once on the road found myself too occupied with my new environment to continue reading.  I might have carried on had the writing and ideas been more compelling.  Frankly, I found them somewhat muddled and uninspiring and once off the road and back to my routine didn’t have the energy to start again.  Perhaps another day.

If you haven’t read much on meditation or contemplative art practice, you might find this book engaging.  It presents many ideas common to the subject and explored in many essays, lectures and books seeking to understand image making in relation to the existential questions of the human experience.

This is not a book-length treatment, but more of a diary or blog, with short entries on one or two ideas, many of them later reintroduced and looked at in relation to newly introduced ideas or concepts.  Among the issues of concern are practicing for the sake of understanding rather than for adulation, developing a voice, experiencing stillness, and using image making to develop a more penetrating understanding of existence.  Long-standing photographic concerns  - Barthe’s studium and punctum, and the objectivity of photographs, for example - are examined in light of contemplative practice.

Friday, August 26, 2016

Yakyu: Japanese Baseball Stadium Culture


















On Shooting
My photographic goals for six weeks in Japan were hardly ambitious.  I had no intention of capturing the spirit of Japan.  I’ve practiced long enough to know that any representation is partial.  For most of the trip I had no photographic plan at all.  The only part for which I had were the visits to five baseball stadiums.

As with many projects, the conception was grander than the final product.  Perhaps what sets the good photographer apart from the average is taking the time to reflect in order to try understand why the output didn’t line up with expectations.