What is this photograph about? This is a question I have
asked myself countless times, and just as often, I struggle to find the answer,
yet I keep asking it, seeking how to bridge the gap between what is ordinary
and what is extraordinary. Sometimes the answer comes unexpectedly, illuminated by streams – streams of light.
Recently I began photographing the night, not just the night
sky which in its own right requires a unique set of techniques and conditions.
Photographing meaningful images and creating imaginative compositions when
light is concentrated in short bursts or by streams of illumination, requires a
different kind of visualization than photographing in daylight. Even at first
light or dusk it requires being able to see how light affects the dark. This
kind of photography explodes with drama and drama is what closes the gap
between routine and exceptional.
The night creates an all-encompassing shadow that covers the
subject matter with an absence of light. It is this absence of light that
defines the baseline of what your night photograph is all about. Add a thin
stream of light from a faint source and the shadow is pierced and the baseline
moves. Change the angle of your perspective and the stream of that light
changes the drama, and the baseline move a little more. Look from a lower or
from a higher vantage point, and the composition evolves toward the answer you
are seeking for what the photograph is about. Sometimes it happens on the first
try, usually it requires many trials and experiments with light at different
vectors to discover what is there. You have to keep moving the baseline, shift
it and mold it until it gives in to succumb to your creative desire.
The trick is to keep asking yourself, “What is this
photograph about?” The gap that separates you from finding the answer is most
certainly a product of your own persistence. Too little and the answer becomes
weak, but stay with it, keep looking, keep experimenting, and the gap narrows
with each attempt. The odd discovery you will eventually realize is there is no
single best answer for any given situation. You may discover the answer was
already there before you began, it was in your heart. You just needed to find
how to release it.
Keith