Pinhole Cliche
I admit I do get professional and "proama"
ladies at my workshops too. They do know how to use their tripods
and are anxious to learn how to use their light meters for pinhole
exposure calculations. But somehow their feminine touch makes better
pictures than your average guy does. At least it seems so.
Yet there are the intuitive guys in touch with
their creative sides that come through too. One graphic designer
taped his cardboard box camera way up a light pole. With it pointing
straight down he could get a dynamic self-portrait of him and his
girlfriend without the problem of a bright sky on a paper negative.
Why didn't I think of that?
A college professor (the only guy in my last
workshop) pointed his box at the outdoor sink drainpipe to catch
a mini waterfall and slowly rolled a child's ball across the floor
in front of his pinhole for another shot. By contrast a teenage
girl slowly whirled an umbrella for effect, a female senior citizen
used the top of her head to balance her pinhole camera to get those
tall buildings to dance a bit.
Regardless of who uses pinhole cameras, man,
woman, or child, we all start with a dark chamber (the womb) within
which something grows. Slowly the image makes itself known on the
light sensitive material and with the right exposure grows towards
fullness. Like farmers, we cast the seed of our vision into the
dark soil of the mother earth and wait for something to grow. The
receptive box waits for the sun to penetrate it and awaken its dormant
light. We open the pinhole door and let the feminine work her mystique.
I see the receptive heart as something that grows
as it is filled with light. The world I see and feel is reflected
into the camera by the mirror of my mind. A lot of good results
come from simply being in the right place at the right time. How
did I manage to be here at this moment? Is it luck or is it part
of some inner "practice" or attunement?
I spent a lot of time on my last photo trip to
Poland and Hungary walking and looking for the light. Often I ended
up somewhere unexpected. Though I had a course planned, the light
often led me in another direction. Some of my favorite images came
at the end of a long day of wandering (or was it wondering), looking,
and trying to keep the mind open. The pinhole camera, my receptive
vessel was filled with memories new and old.
Receiving the image is so much more fun
than forcing it to come.
This article has been requested 1,236
times as of June 15, 2002.
Photos and Text Copyright Edward Levinson 2002
previous
page@2/2
|