Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/10/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Thank you for the encouraging words. A friend and colleague actually used practically the same words as George to describe my photos: "intense energy and love of life", so I was surprised to read them again. It interests me how such qualities can be read from someone's photographs. I've often thought about Plato's challenge to the visual arts, namely that they are three removes from the reality itself. As a critique, I think he was right that we should challenge ourselves can attempt to get beyond a 2-dimensional representation of surfaces to express something living and vibrant that invites relation and communication beyond the small flat image itself. That sounds more pretentious in words than in practice, I'm afraid. I keep my long lenses and SLR kit for wildlife, especially birds. But my job (philosophy teaching in Japan) keeps me very busy, so I find I only have the chance to use the long lenses (400mm and 800mm, both f/5.6) a few times a year. Since 9/9/09 I've been thinking about selling all that kit to buy an M9. I'll keep that idea on the back-burner for a while yet. The appeal of selling off SLR kit to buy an M9 is that I find I use my M6 most of the time these days and recently I've lost 6 rolls of Kodachrome in the mail. I sent the 6 rolls, which have been in a friend's freezer for 11 years, from Japan to Dwayne's. They had precious photos of a trip to the English Farne Islands and Lake District I made this August with my 6 year old daughter. I sent them to Dwayne's early September, and Dwayne's say they still have not received them. I was really looking forward to getting those slides. I'll leave it a bit longer and ask Japan Post if they can find the films. Perhaps the thin brown envelope split and the films are sitting in lost property somewhere. Anyway, I'll get over that and expose some more film with my M6 and hope to post some favourites again before too long.