Hi all,
I've been wrestling for a while with why I feel compelled to photograph - looking through my archives their is a distinct before and after point in my subject matter that reflects a change in what I want to make pictures about. It's taken a long time and a lot of thought to understand my gut responses to certain photographs and not to others - my earliest work is definitely not that important to me anymore.
So what am I trying to picture? To put it simply - the networks humans build in going about their lives. Even the most mundane of things, like litter, represents enormous complexity of our human lives - almost everyone seems to have a wilful blindness to the enormous systems we have built for ourselves. The point in my photos is not so much the actual elements but the networks (transport, social, economic, manufacturing) that brought these items to these locations.
A related topic is a study of how these networks change over time - this delightful laundry sink (one of two for our little apartment complex), that is now unused is a historical artifact that suggests important changes in the mechanisation of our lives - the washing machine out of view makes this whole thing obsolete and unused.
So, my question is, why do you photograph? What makes you want to make a photo, how do you choose what does and doesn't resonate with you? Has what matters to you changed over time?
Sam
My Blog
I've been wrestling for a while with why I feel compelled to photograph - looking through my archives their is a distinct before and after point in my subject matter that reflects a change in what I want to make pictures about. It's taken a long time and a lot of thought to understand my gut responses to certain photographs and not to others - my earliest work is definitely not that important to me anymore.
So what am I trying to picture? To put it simply - the networks humans build in going about their lives. Even the most mundane of things, like litter, represents enormous complexity of our human lives - almost everyone seems to have a wilful blindness to the enormous systems we have built for ourselves. The point in my photos is not so much the actual elements but the networks (transport, social, economic, manufacturing) that brought these items to these locations.

A related topic is a study of how these networks change over time - this delightful laundry sink (one of two for our little apartment complex), that is now unused is a historical artifact that suggests important changes in the mechanisation of our lives - the washing machine out of view makes this whole thing obsolete and unused.

So, my question is, why do you photograph? What makes you want to make a photo, how do you choose what does and doesn't resonate with you? Has what matters to you changed over time?
Sam
My Blog