Thursday, December 29, 2016

The Urge to Create


I wake up each day wanting to create -I find objects around me triggering ideas with images following.  Sometimes it works and other times what I thought I saw just doesn't happen.  However, this is all part of the creative process -you are only limited by your imagination and the will to explore.  It is an exercise in abstracting and selecting ideas within your thought processes -and like the painter or writer presenting these creative ideas on a photographic canvas.  This abstracting is an almost automatic process combining light and the idea into a photograph.
So what starts this creative process?  It is a strong desire to capture an idea via my chosen media, photography.  In my case it is an ability to find uniqueness in a subject -something maybe others overlook.  This uniqueness can be its simplicity or it can be looking at the subject from different perspectives with regards to angles and lighting.  You may find this uniqueness in symbolism or patterns that you see within your subject and want others to see.
I find that when I look at something for any length of time -the more my imagination churns and ideas and images begin to form.  However, this creative process has some limitations created by the boundaries of a machine called the camera.  Therefore, this creative process has two levels to it -the creative use of a mechanical devise combined with your ability to see.  Creativity takes place on two levels - within your mind and the manipulation of the mechanical (whether a camera or an iPhone) to create your image.  So, it is not just the uniqueness of subject but how creative you can be using the various aspects such as lenses and exposure, in this medium you've chosen to use.  Neither camera or software makes the image of course,  - you do. 

This spark we call creativity is either there or isn't. Can it be learned or developed?  That depends on the willingness and the desire to observe and embrace ideas freely.  Thoreau says, " The question is not what you look at but what you see."  It is basically training your mind and eye to see what others don't or refuse to see.  It is a desire to turn the ordinary into something interesting.

Try exercising your eyes to see -even when you don't have a camera in your hands.  Look around you and pinpoint things that interest you.  Is it the light or the shape that caught your eye?  Rather than focusing on the whole dissect the scene into its individual parts and how would you photograph these parts.  The creative process is about observation first and then how you manipulate that observation to convey what you’re seeing and want others to see.