Evolution

** Books mentioned have Amazon affiliate links, meaning I make a few cents if you purchase through my link. I only recommend books that I’ve read.

Each one of us is a work in progress, always changing and evolving. Everything that happens to us; everything we come into contact with, changes us in some way. Conversely, we also play a part in having an impact on everyone and everything we come into contact with – for ill or good.

There’s something very powerful in that notion. It’s quite a responsibility, to be fully aware of what we take in and what we put out.

As I continue my work on this blog and in my workshops, I’m always asking myself what it is I want to say and how I want to connect. It’s been an ever deepening process and it’s good to look back and see how we got to where we are now. In this two part series, I will share how my photography (and life) has evolved and I hope that it makes you think about your own evolution.

The Beginning

I’ve been a visually sensitive person since as far back as I can remember. Before my camera days, I kept scrapbooks filled with pictures and newspaper clippings of my obsessions – figure skating mostly and people I admired. After graduating from College, my mother gave me my first 35mm camera. I was heading out on an adventure to western Canada and I had a lot of fun with that camera, documenting my trip and time in Vancouver. Once I had kids, they become the focus for my lens.

It was during that time that I read a book about Ansel Adam’s life that blew me away – his photography, yes, but mostly the way he lived his life. Adams followed his passion and also used his photography to help  preserve the greatest wilderness areas in the United States.

After visiting Adam’s beloved Yosemite National Park in 1995, I immediately registered for a black and white darkroom class at the local art centre. Eventually, I set up my own darkroom in the basement of my house. The magic that everyone talks about when an image suddenly appears for the first time in the photographic solution ignited my passion for photography. And, it has not wavered since.

Over the next 5 years, I took more darkroom classes (even one in colour) and attended my first photography workshop in New Mexico. I was intent on learning everything I could about photography and becoming proficient at making beautiful prints.

Fern Montage (Orton Effect), 2001

The technical side of photography was my primary focus.

Life took a new turn after attending my first Freeman Patterson workshop in 2001 (and again in 2005). Patterson and his workshop partner, Andre Gallant, taught me visual design and opened my eyes to new ways of seeing.

At this point, photography was a serious hobby. I didn’t want to lose my passion for it by doing commercial work. However, friends started asking for prints (and wanted to pay me for them). I did my first exhibit in 2005 called “God is Light.” 

For the next few years, I focused on using my photography to explore environmental issues – as I completed a Masters degree on the subject. In 2007, I decided to do a 365 day project as part of my studies. I would take a photograph every day on the subject of discovering a sense of place in my hometown of Indianapolis. This project taught me the value of daily practice and how to photograph a theme.

Photography became a form of self-expression.

In 2009, I took the plunge and started selling my work through a cooperative art gallery. While not financially lucrative, over the next three years I learned so much from the other artists in the gallery, as well as what sells and what doesn’t. During that time, I also began writing and blogging online. I set up an online store. I was still focused on creating prints that would sell or be pleasing to others – outcome more than process. I still didn’t completely trust my own instincts.

Photography, both the craft and the art, helps me to be. It allows and enables me to live creatively, which is to honour creation and my own existence. As I consciously pursue my craft, my concerns, anxieties, fears, loves, hopes and dreams bubble up from my unconscious. In this meeting of the conscious and the unconscious, I can acknowledge my woulds and experience healing. ~ Freeman Patterson, Shadowlight

Does this resonate at all with your story as a photographer?

See Part 2 – Contemplative photography and a new way of seeing the art of photography.

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