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dryoptera's photostream
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After a few years of shooting I've decided to step back and evaluate exactly what the point of all of these shots has been. There are definate themes running through the shots, but in a sense it all felt very disjointed. Opportunistic.
Looking back, I find it very funny to see that I don't have a single shot with a human in it. And while there are anthropomorphic subjects, these are often relegated to abandoned stonewalls, lichened-covered gravestones and old foundations of homesteads now forgeotten in the forests.
On the other hand, the vast majority of subjects have come from the natural world. These are often studies of individual species, seperated - visually - from their ecosystems. But not in isolation. I think one thing that I've been doing is subconsciously dissecting my personal meaning of ecosystem. Through my catalouge I find a few archetypical shots of ecosystems, supported by a wide and diverse set of studies focused upon the individual components that make up that ecosystem. The species.
But beyond, really, what have I been doing? What is that final thread? As pretentious as it may sound, I think I've been using the camera to define for myself the ideal natural order. From the component building blocks of species, up through the natural communities (ecosystems), and ultimately up to the wide landcsape level. Nothing conscience, but in retrospect, it looks like the ultimate theme of the work.
And there is a place for us in there. Sure, our footprint through my lens is often the mossy gravestone, but what I think that says is, our footprint, in my mind, has simply moved past the apex of fitting the natural order. I think the bigger theme of the anthropomorphic has definite roots of Old New England. And that ideal is simply waning now.
So that's how I hope to use this site. To organize a series of photographs that explores one idea of an idealized natural order. Organized moving from the base, the "components" (often individual species studies), up to a level of "interaction" (multiple species in a natural setting), up to overviews of "natural communities" (ecosystems). Stepping back further, "landscapes" will be a broad overview of the connections, and looking back in, "footprints" will be how we may all fit in. Or not fit in.
That's a lot of words to say something that John Muir wrapped in a single sentence: "When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the Universe." But then again, that's why Muir is Muir and I'm sitting anonymous behind a computer right now.
A work in progress that I'm sure will remain skeletal for some time as I get through sorting the thousands of images...
dryoptera's favorite photos from other Flickr members (36)
Contacts (1)
Groups (36)
- Help Save the Ash Trees 138 photos, 51 members
- Lichen 8,192 photos, 1,176 members
- White Mountains of New Hampshire 2,791 photos, 213 members
- Native Habitat Restoration Projects 1,039 photos, 45 members
- For The Love Of Dragonflies 29,264 photos, 3,938 members
- All about Trees, Arboriculture, and Tree Care. 12,100 photos, 1,545 members
- Mass Audubon 2,960 photos, 534 members
- Stockbridge Bowl 50 photos, 7 members
- Birdshare 90,542 photos, 2,514 members
- Bees, bees, bees! 46,793 photos, 10,658 members
- An Inordinate Fondness for Beetles 13,072 photos, 1,419 members
- Butterflies of Eastern USA 11,438 photos, 1,426 members
- Waterbird Diet Research 742 photos, 88 members
- Geological Wonders of the World 524 photos, 101 members
- Rural Darkness 9,134 photos, 935 members
- Rural Deterioration 23,150 photos, 1,081 members
- blue + rust 10,243 photos, 1,261 members
- Rural Decay 139,392 photos, 23,951 members
- Photogaphy Artists 8,386 photos, 429 members
- Blue 'n Cool Flowers 2,149 photos, 363 members
- FlickrCentral 4,898,099 photos, 167,390 members
- New England Cemeteries 6,332 photos, 439 members
- Life on the Purple Loosestrife 286 photos, 62 members
- CAVES Inscriptions and Graffiti in caves 252 photos, 26 members
- PERSONAL BEST - Preserving Meaningful Moments 273,225 photos, 11,740 members
- Endangered plants and animals 278 photos, 18 members
- erratics 147 photos, 24 members
- Birds Photos 798,662 photos, 38,113 members
- New England Waterfalls 2,839 photos, 273 members
- The Trustees of Reservations of Massachusetts 712 photos, 127 members
- Herpetology / Everything REPTILIAN 34,909 photos, 2,287 members
- The Nature Conservancy 389,005 photos, 28,212 members
- Secret Life of Birds 39,124 photos, 5,343 members
- Birds as Art 61,122 photos, 2,109 members
- Cicindelephilia 1,644 photos, 155 members
- Salamanders & Caecilians 4,092 photos, 459 members
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- Name:
- chris buelow
- Joined:
- December 2006
- Currently:
- Massachusetts, United States
- Website:
- east quabbin bird club











