
reflection



murmur of voices
unheeded by today’s
regrets of yesterday

Image submitted for Dogwood Photography’s annual 52-week photography challenge.
Week 9 Inspiration: Mood (Your Artistic Inspiration this week is the mood you are feeling today. Take that mood and use it to create art.)
This week Jenn (Traveling at Wits End) invites photographers to “…make the colors the story of the photo” during this time of the year when the world is more gray than green.


if my father were here–
dawn colors
over green fields ~Issa (www.haikuguy.com)

As evening arrives, sorrow visits.
Your phantom, yearned for throughout the day
never appeared.

“For remembrance of her I wanted to write about her,”… but I stopped short with the words, “Ink seems to have frozen up, I cannot write any more.” *
How shall I gather memories of my sister?
The stream of letters is congealed.
No comfort may be found in icicles
~The Sarashina Diary (Diaries of Court Ladies of Old Japan)
*The continuous writing of the cursive Japanese characters is often compared to a meandering river. “Ink seems to have frozen up” means that her eyes are dim with tears, and no more she can write continuously and flowingly.

Image submitted for Dogwood Photography’s annual 52-week photography challenge.
Week 8: Composition: leading lines (It is easy to use Leading Lines to show depth in an image or guide the eye to a specific spot in the image. Instead, this week use leading lines to show the concept of infinity.)
spring breeze–
the pine on the ridge
whispers it ~Issa (www.haikuguy.com)

“[Frank Meadow] Sutclifffe rarely left Whitby, where his portrait studio kept him busy, and said that we was ‘tethered for the greater part of each year by a chain, at the most only a mile or two long.’ To most modern photographers this would seem a crippling restriction, but Shutcliffe gradually realized that is was an asset to him as a photographer since it forced him to concentrate on the transitory effects that would transform familiar scenes.” (cited: Frank Meadow Sutcliffe, the Aperture History of Photography Series: Aperture 1979
While I dreamed of traveling during those long-hours filled with work and family responsibilities, I find that Frank Shutcliffe’s creative work serves to move me toward greater acceptance of being “tethered” during this retirement period with the challenge to open myself to the “transitory effects” of nature that transforms the landscape close to home.
Image, haiku, and excerpt from Aperture submitted in response to Patti’s (P. A. Moed) lens-artists photo challenge: nature.

image submitted in response to Debbie’s (Travel with Intent’s) Saturday’s six-word musings.

I hope you enjoy this informative video from Candid Frame….
in the long day
scribbling on a wall…
eyes, nose ~Issa (www.haiku.guy)




Images of artists’ creation of the emotional expressions of eyes submitted in response to Jenn’s (Traveling at Wits End) photo challenge: eyes.
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