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Images © copyright Dennis Cordell
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dennis cordell
the subject is the echo of its creator
For
me, composing the portrait through my viewfinder is homologous with the
Indian notion of darshan.
Literally, darshan implies “to see” or “sight.” But
more specifically darshan is concerned with an event in
consciousness that creates an interaction between the seer and the seen.
Thus darshan heightens consciousness. Another term is rasa,
literally meaning “juice” or “essence.” Rasa denotes an essential mental state
dominated by a primary experience of the viewer by what is viewed. For
me rasa is a vital component in
photographic composition, similar to what Roland Barthes has called the
photograph’s noeme.
I feel that photography has a melody but
not a song. It is a story without diegesis…a fetish without an aura. A
photo is a receptacle without utility, the dance without movement. A
painting is hyperbole, whereas a photograph is litotes. Photography is
the crown jewel of austere poverty. It is what the Japanese poet Hakuin
Ekaku has called “the sound of snow.”
A photograph can be the answer to
a koan that is not information but
consciousness. There is an energy that flows between the photographer
and the subject. This energy is the source of inspiration and has a
classical association to the muse. This muse, or exuberance is known
as prana or “life force” in Sanskrit, rlung in Tibetan,
ch’I or qi in Chinese, pneuma in Greek,
spiritus in Latin, ruwach in Hebrew, and, perhaps the word
“soul” in English. Sometimes it is necessary to be very patient for this
vitality to arise. Often an external element such as the light and
shadow on the subject is an inappropriate ebullience for the “breath” of
the muse to arise, but when the “breath” proceeds, the camera
photographs and the photographer and subject fuse to create an
amalgamation of beauty. The subject is the echo of its creator.
As the photographer Minor White said, “Spirit always stands still long
enough for the photographer it has chosen.”
~ Dennis Cordell - from his website
For more info see:
http://www.tricycle.com/blog/photography-dennis-cordell
and
http://www.betterinblackandwhite.com/
dennis cordell's website
dennis cordell's Flickr photostream
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