Rebuilding our Sight

 

Tom Rankin

Over the last couple of weeks, we have been exploring light and dark as physical properties of a photograph, lived emotional experiences, and as a metaphor for seeing and not seeing. 

Last week, we explored the idea that both the photographer and the subject have hidden depths and the importance of embracing both the ordinary and the extraordinary (the mundane and the mystery) as we engage in our practice. 

This week we will continue to explore sight and insight, and to rebuild our sight as we continue to expand our ability to take in the fullness of life with all of its complexity and contrast.  

Tom Rankin, in his essay The Cool Radiance of the Obvious, offers us this: 

“Photography in its finest and most decisive moments is about those tired or ignored or unseen parts of our lives, the mundane and worn paths that sit before us so firmly that we cease to notice. It is, we might say, about rebuilding our sight in the face of blindness, of recovering our collective vision. And yet, the photographer is also in a perpetual battle to see beyond and around what he or she has already seen, to bring to their own work a “sovereign vision,” …

Read Tom Rankin’s full essay The Cruel Radiance of the Obvious here:


 
Susan Patrice

As the founder and director of Makers Circle, Susan Patrice designs and implements arts-informed community initiatives in partnership with non-arts organizations who want to expand their reach and impact through innovative cross-sector collaboration. Makers Circle has a deep passion for the power of the creative process to encourage adaptive change, expand awareness, and open up new ways of seeing and relating. We believe that the arts and artists should play a major role in community regeneration and non-profit advancement. Web design and digital storytelling are foundational to the work we do with non-profits.

https://kinship.photography/
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Inspiration and Resources #4