Thursday, September 6, 2007

"Not Older...Just Better!"

I was listening to a pod cast by Brooks Jensen the other day where he talked about turning fifty years old. He said he was depressed, feeling old, etc., and decided to review some information he had gathered as a young person about the age of certain famous photographers when they published their most famous works. What I found so amazing was the ages involved were all what we might consider ‘old’….in fact some of the best works of people like Ansel Adams and Alfred Stieglitz were done in their 60’s, 70’s, and beyond! Cool!
Then I asked myself why? What about being older seems to foster the ability to capture images that express so much in such a timeless way? And here’s what I think….maybe just a bunch of baloney, or maybe not….
There are basically two ways to photograph something. We can photograph for our own purpose (whatever that may be), or we can photograph something for what it is. Let me explain. When we photograph for ‘us’ we have a specific goal in mind. It might be to complete a contract…say a wedding job or sports event. It might be a subject we think could bring us to the forefront on the critique forums and heap the praise of our peers on our heads. It might be something we could hang on the wall and watch people swoon as they view our ‘work’, and so on. In any case we let the end result dictate what we do as we take the photograph because the end result is the reason for the photograph.
When we photograph something for what it is we photograph it for its own sake. The reason for the photograph has nothing to do with ‘us’ per se. Rather we are there to use what skills we have to capture ‘it’…and we do that if for no other reason than because ‘it’ deserves to be captured. One interesting thing about doing this sort of photography is that it can happen serendipitously….i.e. the war photojournalist who is snapping away and suddenly realizes he has a photo of Marines on Iwo Jima raising the American flag. But more often than not these photographs are the exception…not the rule. They may only account for one photograph out of thousands.
So how does a photographer see something for what it really is? I think to really see it I have to bring it into my consciousness…my psyche…let it roll around…and somehow let all that ‘I’ am tell me what ‘it’ really is! And that I think is the point…that what ‘I’ am determines what I see. I am what I am….which is all that makes me unique and individual. It is all the experiences of my life…lived each moment…the highs and lows…the hurts and pleasures…everything that has brought me to this particular place and time.
So…..(the pay off!)… how could a person with little or no life experience ‘see’ something with the same degree of discernment and clarity as one who has lived longer (and thus experienced more)? Is it possible that as we age we use the depth of our selves to discern things more deeply…more completely? (Yes yes…I know….there are young people who do amazing work….but really those who do so repeatedly seem to be exceptions…and once again not the rule). So I guess my theory is that if the objective of one’s work is to take a photograph of a particular ‘something’ for it’s intrinsic value…then that intrinsic value is best seen and appreciated by one whose years allow the full depth of that ‘something’ to show through. One who can do so does a great service for the rest of us as viewers of photographic work.
There! I said it….and I can’t wait to get older because my photographs should just get better!

5 comments:

Debra Trean said...

JSA - interesting thoughts you have written here.

I can only speak for myself and I find aging a Fabulous thing as I just turned 51. First time in my life I have time to pursue my own interest as well as live my own dreams.

I find younger photographers have the ability to see things with a slightly edgy slant that I do not. I shoot mostly equine and hope that what I see is expressed in my images. As many of you know I have great difficulty straying from the original colors etc. So I guess I see younger photographers as more creative. I think older photographers are able to present work that older people perhaps will view over and over again and perhaps understand more. We tend to ponder on things a bit more don't you think. If one goes to look at images at the JPG magazine site which has alot of younger photographers I think it will speak volumes on what I am stating.

I think aging is fabulous and I feel truly blessed to be able to live my dreams and create equine art based on my true "passion" and even though my work is not perfect and I am still growing into my camera I think work from the heart goes along way.

I am getting off the subject as I am being called to go but I hope I have shared my view. I think you have raised some interesting points here. Would love to hear what TED thinks as his mind is one I love to listen to as well.

I will be back to peak at more of your blog.

very nice...and ty.

Ted said...

SPLAT!

I like splat moments. You know when you abruptly understand something and you mutter, "Of Course" while splatting the open palm of your hand against your forehead?

This essay's done it. And up under my receding hair line, I still have the red mark to prove it.

Cool....

Thanks for sharing

Ted

My Images Explained
My Images Stored

John Roberts said...

I'll be hitting the big five-oh next March, and you can bet getting older is on my mind these days. This is just what I needed to read!

Anonymous said...

LOL, guess I'm old enough to be the mother of all of you! I'm 75 and going strong - tho I can't keep up with 79-yr-old Wes from the RV forum.

I'd read that essay of Brooks Jensen's as I subscribe to LensWork. He's "right on" about aging--provided we take care of ourselves and stay active and interested in lots of things and keep on honing our art and craft, no matter our chosen medium.

My work shows a different direction from the directions I chose when younger - even when only a year younger, lol. And retirement is great, providing of course, we deal with the govt rules and regs successfully. Now I have time to pursue my interests and dreams. What a lot of time I and others have had to waste trying to make a living, lol.

Now we're free to set whatever values we want to upon ourselves and our work. Having to work for others degrades us most of the time, because we must allow them to set the value on our work.

I really don't think younger artists and in particular younger photographers, are more creative. They're more willing to stick their necks out, perhaps. But then again, this may all be a cry for attention, too. The "look at me syndrome" - some of them try so hard to be different that they lose meaning entirely. Some of their artist's statements don't make sense at all. I do hope they'll age gracefully, tho.

So, Ted (the one from Splattsville), have you had any other splatty epiphanies? What is your splattiest one?

Have a great time getting older, mellower and wiser, everyone - cheers!

Flo

Debra Trean said...

:) fun reading everyone has their own perspective on growing older and what the younger photographers are up to. I think we all are finding our own space and time as we age and thats alright with me. So long as one enjoys what they do that is the bottom line. I loved reading all the comments here. Fun question to ponder - aging - photographers style with aging.