Tuesday, November 30, 2010

 My sister for her age is very innocent and loves to see the best in people, while not understanding why and how people can be so mean to each other, especially if they are "good" friends. I took these pictures of my sister because I believed that they represent my sister's personality. The top picture is of my sister mining for gold in a recreation at the Taste of Colorado. Here she is truly and genuinely enjoying the moment and goofing off trying to find little gold specks. The bottom picture I took after she bought the blue sunhat she is wearing. The light was hitting her perfectly and the hat was bringing out her blue eyes so vividly that I knew the picture would show my sisters true beauty. Not necessarily physical beauty, even though it does show that, but also her inside beauty which is shown through her eyes. 
I took a picture of this piano because it represented unnatural beauty and yet it still catches the eye of people and look at the piano with aw. The piano has been painted over and slashed with color to make it look better than its original state; making the piano more pleasing to the eye. I took a picture of it because it was beautiful, with a little sunlight hitting the top and the color blue just popping out.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Susan Sontag


Susan Sontag: In Plato’s Cave
Reading In Plato’s Cave by Susan Sontag I realized that for Sontag, taking a picture was the equivalent to invading someone’s privacy to the extent that she related it to sex, rape and other sexual terms which are looked down on as negative in our society. However, my perception of In Plato’s Cave is that yes, to take a photo of someone is immortalizing them as well as invading a personal and private space; however, for me it is not at all that same as getting so close to someone like you would with sex, invade their privacy like rape or a Peeping Tom. For me it is more like creating a close and personal yet spiritual connection with my subject; may it be human or an inanimate object. When I take a picture I see it as saving a moment in time that you will never be able to get back and immortalizing that moment, because that picture will live on forever and ever. This is one point in which Susan Sontag and I agree in her book in the chapter In Pluto’s Cave. Photography for me has been an outlet in my life. It helps me cope with things that are going on in my life good or bad, and by photographing something beautiful and forever immortalizing it relaxes me. Also ever since I started with photography I have been seeing the world differently. I see everything as beautiful in their own way, and I always look at objects or people and I see how I would take a photo of them and there the light would hit just right. Yes, taking a photo is forever holding that moment or person in history, but it is also a beautiful connection with that object or person. Not one there is a violent intrusion, but one of a beautiful and calming moment in life.