-PM
2/24/2011
Face Nom
-PM
2/17/2011
"Slow down..."




2/15/2011
Forgotten Roll from 2010







2/10/2011
New Urban Disconnect
This is the nineteenth Instruction for the Street Photography Now Project, written to inspire fresh ways of looking at and documenting the world we all live in.
This challenge was later expanded on the Flickr group thread by George Georgiou:
"Hello all, this is George Georgiou. The quote is not quite how I put it, I wouldn't have used the word Banal. What I am interested in is what the relationship is between a modern planned urban/suburban space and the individual. In other words, planned public space where people can feel comfortable or familiar with but allows people to move through this space without contact, we almost become invisible to each other. Often these are made to a blueprint, airports, housing estates, bus stations, shopping malls etc. If you watch people in these spaces you notice a disconnect, people in their own worlds/minds. It is this disconnect from what is around you that I find interesting. A simple example is how people talk on the mobile, as if they are at home, in private. Eggleston and Shore are good examples of this. What they look at is very 'commonplace'. The urban environment and peoples interaction with it. I hope that helps. George"
I feel that the above image ties in closer to what George said on the forum. The woman is completely lost in thought whilst typing a text. Her expression is fixed and stern, her walk was brisk. The other face in the image adds to the 'disconnection', the woman is oblivious to the man looking at her (and he is oblivious to me).
My 'B-side' this week focused on the banal. I always find that a stringent deadpan approach to photographing is ideal for capturing 'banality'. I love the word banal, and banality is verbalised best in Chris Marker's Sans Soleil (1983)... See the scene here!

2/04/2011
Four Years
Life’s Haste (2007)
We are not the sea or the silver stars of the sky.
We are not the hills or mighty moon… Why?
‘Cause we are Mortal Men: fated to die.
A haunting thought to most, but I ask you
To look again at Mortal Men: to review
our span on Earth. Yes, it’s short and fast.
Ever racing and chasing; spinning present to past.
The first flake of virginal snow cannot linger,
If it did- no playing or hooraying would ensue.
The sun cannot be tardy in reaching the summit,
If it did- darkness and gloom would reign supreme.
Yet we remember: the golden dawn and powdery puff
For their befuddling beauty is ample enough.
A human life is akin to all of these
Like light glinting on the still seas
surface. There and gone. Like Cortez’s gold
We should hold them in our mind. Not
so we are eternally saddened at the passing-
That we remember, with vigor, their Being.
So crystallize those treasures and avoid Time’s
Ravages and traps! Use pictures and rhymes,
Stories and thoughts- to keep that person
Place or view perpetually fresh and anew.
-PM
I hardly slept the night before the funeral. Going for a walk whilst the sun was coming up seemed like the best way to gather my thoughts and emotions before meeting the family or dealing with events of the day. Now I wish I had photographed the full day so I had more portraits and images but, and I think this was Robert Capa who said it, to photograph a funeral you cannot be part of the procession.

Bus Bricolage




