Seeing the Sea
I am at my home in the
mountains ten kilometers inland and can hear the sea. The clouds
flowing across the sky direct my thoughts toward the coast. Eyeing
the light, I hop in the always-loaded van, and head for one of my
favorite points.
Down at the beach watching the flow of the waves,
the rhythmic movements stir up images. How many times have I been
here? How familiar, yet how new and fresh. How to capture the feeling
of the moment, the light of the season, the breath of the wind.
Thoughts go through my mind as I "prepare" to make pinhole
photos of the sea.
I say go through the mind but it is partly unconscious.
It is a feeling or intuition, combined with memories of inner landscapes.
The desire to share the experience with others encourages me to
get out the camera.
And why the pinhole camera instead of another
device? I don't really see this world in fractions of a second as
modern cameras do. Taking in a scene with all the senses, with the
heart and mind, for 15 seconds, a minute, or an hour is for me a
contemplation of life itself. When I view the ocean in all its vastness,
it is recorded in my memory.
As a tool, the pinhole camera helps me to express
what I feel in those intimate moments in nature. The eye is the
aperture; the image is imprinted on my light sensitive inner being.
"Satori" enlightenment may come in an instant, but it
is the culmination of something accrued over time.
The pinhole camera becomes the witness
to my ongoing journey. Together we observe, preserve, and take the
scene home with us.
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