More is Less
(more or less)
Five years ago, I was fortunate to be able to spend several weeks ago the Svalbard archipelago, mainly travelling around in a 12-berth yacht. This was a collective private charter, not a “workshop”, which made it just about affordable for me. A similar trip with the overhead of paying for several “educators” to come along for free would have been way more expensive and probably less fun. It was quite an experience, but photographically I haven’t really made much of it so far. The basic reason for this is that I took far, far too many photos. The total is over 5500, which is just ridiculous. The editing process just becomes impossible, mainly because of the bulk - when you have 20 near identical photos of the same collapsing iceberg, trying to choose the top pick is tedious, and when you have 300 such scenes, it gets completely overwhelming. But also, there’s a problem with focus. Not focus as in out of focus, which is a fairly common characteristic of my photography, but focus as in theme.
Revisiting this collection after largely neglecting it for 5 years has helped me to realise this. The impetus to revisiting it comes at least in part from the drastic disruption imposed on my move from Aperture, to CaptureOne, and finally to Lightroom. This move is not something I’d honestly call a good thing, but in the end, perhaps the resultant disruption will turn out to be an unexpected but very valuable side benefit.
I’ve come to realise that the lack of a meaningful, coherent theme is actually quite common throughout my photography. For example, in this case I’ve always kept to the implicit assumption that “Svalbard” is a valid theme. But which Svalbard? That of misty, gloomy seascapes? Of ice cliffs? Of glaciers calving through mountains? Of arctic landscape? Of abandoned mining settlements, or active scientific settlements? Of wildlife - and then, of seals, or polar bears, or kittiwakes? The list could go on. In my first pass, I selected a sample of 16 photos drawn from all categories, which drew some nice comments, but they don’t really say much beyond “hey, look, I went to Svalbard. I’m so cool”. Vacation shots, basically. A second set drawn exclusively from the abandoned Russian settlement of Pyramiden was more meaningful to me, and hopefully more engaging. Having now revisited the whole set, I’ve been able to identify other themes and hopefully coherent sets, which obviously still document my experiences in Svalbard, but hopefully in a more mature way, which goes someway to communicating my reactions to the environments.
I think this teaches me two lessons: first, the old adage that less is more is never more applicable than when applied to quantities of photos. And the second, even older, is to work out what I want to communicate before pressing the shutter button. Applying these two points might help to distinguish between vacation photography and some form of self-expression. Not that there’s anything wrong with vacation photography, but sometimes that doesn’t satisfy me.
I’m not entirely sure yet how to present these new Svalbard sets. Some individual photos have leaked out on to Flickr, to see how they look “in the wild”. I expect some sets I will publish here, either in freeform blog post format, or as galleries. But the main thing I have in mind is a Blurb book. If I can do that to my satisfaction, then I think this new way of looking at my own photography will have drawn fruit.
6 comments
Florian Freimoser November 13, 2015 - 10:18in my humble opinion, themes are indeed very helpful to focus and also to "sharpen the eye" ... and I can quite understand a certain dissatisfaction of vacation shots. However, in my experience themes develop and I am not sure if it is possible to define a theme from past and already captured photographs.
I have realized that some part of my photography is a kind of free exploration, while another part is following a particular theme (and vacation shots, of course). Often subjects that I discovered in the exploration phase will become a theme much later. So maybe, you can discover the start of a theme in your Svalbard photographs?
Have a nice weekend!
P.S. I think moving to Lightroom is not at all bad and I find Blurb books fantastic 😊
6 comments
David Mantripp November 14, 2015 - 8:56My basic view on Lightroom is that it offers more as an image editor, but it is often frustrating as a library/catalog tool, and really clumsy as an organizer/collection editor. But there's nothing better on the market, now. Blurb I like too, but the books are just too expensive. I use an independent digital press for anything that I try to sell...
6 comments
Florian Freimoser November 14, 2015 - 10:17I am sorry if my comment has sounded negative - it was not intended that way. Also, I think that in your case, different facets of "Svalbard" may really be the theme, not?
For my understanding, a theme is usually something that I pursue for a longer period of time. In that sense, for me, a series of photographs from a particular location will likely never be a theme - unless the location was the theme. While on vacation, I usually take a lot of family shots, and a few photographs for particular themes I am following since a while (water reflections, flowers, etc.). In some cases, a single photograph that I have taken for myself, but that does not fit an existing theme, may, in the future, become the starting point for a new series. I could well imagine that when you explore a location or subject in the future, you will suddenly discover something that reminds you of one of your Svalbard photographs. And then, if you continue, you will probably start discovering many more such similar subjects ... and a theme/series will have started. In any case, I think this is how it works for me.
I sympathise a lot with your compromise and the different interests of companions ... indeed a "problem" 😊.
... as for Lightroom, I am a very strong "believer" (a strange word for me 😊), since the beginning, and only deal with my image files through this program. But maybe I am too easily satisfied .... Blurb books are not cheap, that is correct, but there are often large discounts and I usually wait for such occasions until I print a book. I also had the impression that the book printing services in Switzerland were considerably more expensive, but I have not compared prices since a while. The quality and customer service of Blurb are, in my opinion, excellent.
Have a nice weekend!
6 comments
Project Hyakumeizan November 16, 2015 - 9:48As for the current version of this post, it raises an interesting philosophical question. Must a collection of landscape images have a unifying theme or style or idea? Guess it might depend on your underlying philosophy - does the photographer impose his/her own thoughts on the landscape (romantic)? Or do they let the landscape speak for itself (classical)?
I was looking at Eliot Porter's "Iceland" collection the other day. Many images are very Eliot-esque: micro landscapes, or tightly cropped scenes (no sky). But, mixed in, are some not particularly Eliot-esque images. But, heh, maybe those were just his vacation photos ....
6 comments
David Mantripp November 16, 2015 - 9:56I think generally speaking, if you don't have some form of objective, which I'm using interchangeably with theme, then things start to get a bit random.
After all, a bunch of mountains in Japan could just be a bunch of mountains. Or they could be something more significant 😊
6 comments
David Mantripp November 16, 2015 - 10:00But hey, next week I'll have a completely different opinion!