
Nikon D750 f/4.5 1/125 50mm 100 ISO

Nikon D750 f/4.5 1/125 50mm 100 ISO

Nikon D750 f/4 1/160 s 55 mm 800 ISO
Clear waters unchanged
in a meadow
I saw once long ago,
will you remember
this face of mine?
~Saigyo (B Watson, Poems of a Mountain Home)

Nikon D750 f/4.5 1/3,200 85mm 800 ISO

Spring Creek…Nikon D750 f/4.5 1/2,000 85mm 100 ISO
“…we never just ‘see’ something in the sense that a photographic plate receives rays of light. In the real world we bring a lot of our selves to the party. And that means gaze alters what it finds.”
cited: Iain McGilchrist, The Master and his Emissary

Nikon D750 f/4.5 1/3,200 48mm 100 ISO
“About twelve years ago, I met a homeless woman who identified herself as a sundowner. She described how each evening’s sun invited her to settle down along the side of her life’s path so that her journey could begin afresh in the morning sun. She eloquently described an undercurrent of yearning that ebbed and flowed throughout her soul and how, in her past days, she found herself at the mercy of private memories, thoughts, and imaginations and had encountered, time and time again, various degree of discontent despite the seemingly fulfilling qualities of her life.
As I hear the suffering within women who story their lives through the multi-colored threads of substance use, I find myself acknowledging a similarity within each of these unique stories with my own metaphysical search for someone, something, or some place that remains beyond the forever next horizon. Each of our unique narratives reveal an unending wandering with satchels of discontent that tell of a spiritual emptiness and an emotional intimacy with a homesickness for a place one knows cannot be.”
~B Catherine Koeford (A Meditative Journey with Saldage)

Looking for curves…Nikon D750 f/7.1 1/80s 35mm 100 ISO
“Photography is a medium where one admires the work done by others…It is great to admire the work of other people, but it’s necessary to have one’s own distinctive style…I would rather be a mediocre photographer than an excellent imitator..the best thing I have ever heard about my work is when someone said, “that is unmistakably a Ralph Gibson photograph…” ~Ralph Gibson
During a taped interview with COOPH, Ralph Gibson shares a koan that was offered to him by Dorothea Lange, “Oh, I see your problem Ralph you have no point of departure.”
To which Ralph replied, “That’s true Dorothea. What is the point of departure?
“Well if you have your camera and you’re going down to the drugstore to buy toothpaste…you have an objective to buy toothpaste…you might then intersect something worth photographing. But if you just walk around the street looking for something to shoot you will never achieve very much.”

Looking for geometric shapes….Nikon D750 f/7.1 0.4s 24mm 100 ISO
Ralph Gibson has expanded his initial understanding of a point of departure. It guides him to be looking for an unusual point of interest or perspective in an ordinary frame. To help achieve this point of departure, he notes, “Take your camera everywhere with you… If you have your camera in tow, chances are that you might come across a striking frame. But, if you just stand at the corner of a street and wait for something to happen, you will never get a picture.”
“To have a point of departure is not to go out and shoot. It’s to have a project in mind and going out looking for a shot that represents or showcases this emotion or concept that your project is about.” ~Ralph Gibson

looking for shadows…Nikon D750 f/7.1 1/30s 35mm 100 ISO
“From now on, before I go shoot, I’ll consult internally to focus on one thing I want to capture, and have that point of departure. It’ll give purpose to my work and me being out there. The advantages are that I’ll learn patience, presence and a deeper sense of observation. This is a powerful and deep message…have a point of departure.” ~Ralph Gibson

looking for shadows…Nikon 750 f/7.1 1/15s 35mm 100 ISO
“I have investigated a lot of ideas—I love taking pictures of nothing, of ordinary objects, maybe even just the corner of a room. I love flattening and even reducing things. When I photograph flesh, I like to make it look like a stone. But, when I am photographing a stone, I like to make it look alive. I love re-contextualising the quality of my subjects.”~Ralph Gibson
Why not take a few minutes to wander about a gallery of Ralph Gibson’s work: http://www.ralphgibson.com/gallery.html
As I’ve noted before, I have enjoyed the process of sharing ideas and images. I’m looking forward to reading your thoughts about point of departure.


Last Sunday while searching for possible summer camping sites, we found a bit of landscape art…a sculptured hawk perched upon a rock.
Submitted in response to Lost in Translation’s photo challenge: zoom in, zoom out

Nikon D750 f/7.1 1/30s 35mm 100 ISO

Nikon D750 f/7.1 1/800s 55mm 100 ISO
What is it
about this twilight hour?
Even the sound
of a barely perceptible breeze
pierces the heart.
~Izumi Shikibu (J Hirshfield & M Aralani, The Ink Dark Moon)


Although we think the past is gone and the future is not yet here, if we look deeply we see that reality is more than that. The past exists in the guise of the present because the present is made from the past. In this teaching, if we establish ourselves firmly in the present and touch the present moment deeply, we also touch the past and have the power to repair it. That is a wonderful teaching and practice. We don’t have to bear our wound forever. We are all unmindful at times; we have made mistakes in the past. It does not mean that we have to always carry that guilt without transforming it. Touch the present deeply and you touch the past. Take care of the present and you can repair the past. The practice of beginning anew is a practice of the mind. Once you realize what mistake you made in the past, you are determined never to do it again. Then the wound is healed. It is a wonderful practice.
~Thich Nhat Hanh & Melvin McLeod (The Pocket Thich Nhat Hanh)
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