|
|
Roman Eye's photostream
|
I use an Olympus CAMEDIA digital 575 zoom. Small enough to fit in my pants pocket in my travels. I am a peripatetic, seeking visual beauty as I go, wherever I go. The zoom works well to capture architectural details up high on a building or views of distant mountains or natural details that are across a steep ravine. A close-up feature allows shots of, say, wildflowers or wild mushrooms up to a 7 inch range.
The digital "eye" is a mechanical eye giving focus to all the various depths in the field of vision. In that respect it is unlike our natural eye that is constantly adjusting focus, charting our way as we enter the visual field, walking or driving, for example. In digital, a close-up frame for more distant views will mimic this natural fucus function of the eye and give life to the photo. The digital point and click camera has a difficult time with, say, complex cityscapes. But if you provide a clearly focused foreground for the eye, the lack of definition of the scape will not seem so obvious. Example: www.flickr.com/photos/9405610@N02/3685968097/
The sense of steep decline is difficult to express in digital, for the reasons given above. Here's an example of how to get around that: www.flickr.com/photos/9405610@N02/3613468428/ in/set-72157... Only the "doll house" scale of the picnic tables puts you up on the vertigo inducing steep bluff high above the scene.
Sadly, one thing my little digital cannot do well is nature photography of birds and insects. You have only to scan through flickr to discover the riches that more sophisticated cameras can bring to photography.
Excessive photo processing diminishes the presence of the subject, making it a "picture" and not a "photo". I love Cartier-Bresson's "Capturing the Moment" aesthetic. If you get it right in the first place all you need is a little cropping to make sure your composition is centered or adjusting exposure to make sure the light is right.. That's the "art" of photography: finding the vantage point, through imagination, where the subject will look great, "composed", interesting, expressive. Eventually as you get to know the possibilities of your camera. Its "eye" becomes a virtual eye in your mind and your imagination will lead you to the sweet spot for a cool shot. I love it when the two dimensional and three dimensional compositions come together in unsuspected and beautiful ways to thrill the eye.
My photography is an expression of my understanding of Civilization. But how do you define "Civilization"? In fact are we not undergoing a radical re-definition of civilization? Identities, so firmly rooted in Nation and Religion, have broken out from their narrow mold. The internet allows a student in Madrid to play Bridge with an elderly couple in China. Photo sharing creates virtual communities of people throughout the world with a similar visual outlook. A gay couple are married in Massachusetts and raise a family of perfectly normal children. The 24 hour news cycle brings the world together and sends political hacks scurrying. Xenophobes and Chauvinists shrink to a paranoid, indefensible corner for not joining the new civilization. Sadly, the old paradigms die a painful death for many people or follow them tenaciously to the bitter end.
But it goes beyond that. Ecologists speak of "biological communities", plants, animals, fungi, bacteria, that have carved out a niche somewhere in our natural world, achieving accommodation, symbiotic interrelationships, micro-climate utilization. I suggest that we extend the notion of civilization to include biological communities. After all, these are the underpinnings, the sine qua non of human civilization. We have come to a new civility and reverence for nature and natural history, one that makes the closed-end religious sense of holiness seem puny and near-sighted and race/nation forms of self identity seem like so much servitude. In the 1820's, Ralph Waldo Emerson made a prescient observation: "'Know thyself' and 'Study nature' should be fused into one maxim" I am at home both in the canyons of the mountains and the canyons of the city. My friends are dwellers in the city and dwellers in wild nature.
Roman Eye's favorite photos from other Flickr members (79)
Contacts (37)
Groups (50)
- Roma - Rome 77,005 photos, 7,858 members
- Art Deco Interiors & Furniture 1,701 photos, 142 members
- mediterranean climate garden 7,027 photos, 401 members
- California Historical Landmarks 1,402 photos, 185 members
- The Architect 8,085 photos, 288 members
- California State Parks & Beaches 470 photos, 83 members
- Mountains Anywhere 171,535 photos, 16,757 members
- Mount Diablo, California 1,628 photos, 204 members
- Cooking with Wild Mushrooms 43 photos, 5 members
- World Wine Woman 4,947 photos, 1,167 members
- ART DECO et MODERNISME à PARIS 1,703 photos, 1,032 members
- * Roman Empire * Sets * 5,357 photos, 177 members
- Photos to read 71,528 photos, 3,490 members
- BLACK AND WHITE MOSAICS 886 photos, 255 members
- Marine - (3 per day) 79,787 photos, 5,995 members
- Eating San Francisco 1,009 photos, 129 members
- California Coast (The California Coast) 23,290 photos, 1,344 members
- Golden Gate National Recreation Area 2,139 photos, 332 members
- GGNRA Landscape and Nature Photography 196 photos, 15 members
- crystals/ glass 19,924 photos, 1,172 members
- Floors / Suelos 2,129 photos, 406 members
- Exotic Revival Architecture 158 photos, 17 members
- The Twentieth Century and Contemporary House 13,875 photos, 1,743 members
- Fog and Rain 157,390 photos, 31,655 members
- NOUVEAU ⌂ JUGENDSTIL in PARIS 1,070 photos, 94 members
- Vines and Vineyards 24,246 photos, 3,424 members
- Douglas Tilden 28 photos, 6 members
- Strasbourg 13,302 photos, 986 members
- Aesthetics of Food 44,502 photos, 1,286 members
- Art Deco Swirls 785 photos, 55 members
- Coastal World and Water Views (CWWVG), Check our NEW Sub-group! 42,121 photos, 1,790 members
- Golden Gate Exposition SF 1939-40 236 photos, 23 members
- Streamline Moderne Design 4,650 photos, 678 members
- Doors Around The World 11,481 photos, 929 members
- Art Deco 26,349 photos, 2,487 members
- Light in Architecture 39,995 photos, 4,834 members
- !Flickr Food & Cuisine Around the world *none food pics will be 123,285 photos, 6,569 members
- FRANCE Photos 4,571 photos, 204 members
- The Ancient World 27,823 photos, 1,403 members
- Teatri(Theaters) - ARCHITETTURE TEATRALI(theaters architecture) 165 photos, 74 members
- Sunsets & Sunrises around the world (121 Countries!) 564,588 photos, 86,060 members
- Vienna 62,080 photos, 3,577 members
- Athens, Greece 5,577 photos, 416 members
- ***FLICKRPEDIA*** House of Knowledge/Please comment on 3 11,464 photos, 752 members
- The Art of Bufano 176 photos, 16 members
- Northern California Photography 92,284 photos, 3,864 members
- California Stone Architecture 169 photos, 18 members
- Religious Architecture 350 photos, 19 members
- Architecture from 1900 to 1999 16,793 photos, 1,359 members
- Escaleras/Stairs 31,724 photos, 6,365 members
Testimonials (0)
Roman Eye doesn't have any testimonials yet.
- Name:
- Bob Gorman
- Joined:
- June 2007
- I am:
- Male











