weekly photo challenge: juxtaposition

weeklyphotochallengejuxaposition

juxtaposition…a method frequently used by surrealist artist…because a photograph collapses three dimension into two, a photograph is always a juxtaposition of some sort.

The reason juxtaposition is conventionally regarded as a liability is because it occurs whether or not the photographer is aware of it. For example, when a photographer fails to notice the back ground when taking a portrait, the subject may end up looking as though there is a tree coming out of its head. Conscious application of the technique of juxtaposition, however, requires constant awareness of the interaction between background, foreground, and middle ground and a conscious decision to use such collapsing effects to either impart new meaning to a scene or to accentuate its original meaning.*

Visit The Daily Press @ WordPress to view additional  images submitted for this week’s photo challenge: juxtaposition

source:

Tao of Photography

P.L. Gross & S.I. Shapiro

weekly photo challenge: window

In the aging house,

crookedness of the door being straightened,

a spring-like winter day.

            ~Buson*

weeklyphotochallengewindow

For additional images submitted for this week’s photo challenge: winter, visit The Daily Press @ WordPress.com

 

*cited:

Haiku Master Buson

Yuki Sawa & Edith Shiffert

weekly photo challenge: joy

The child claps his hands

playing alone, happily

under a festive tree

                    ~Issa*

weeklyphotochallengejoy 1

Visit The Daily Post @ WordPress to view additional images submitted for this week’s photo challenge:  joy

 

*cited in:

The Spring of My Life

trans: Sam Hamill

weekly photo challenge: let there be light!

A full moon!

In the Sacred Fountain Garden

a fish is dancing

                   ~Buson*

weeklyphotochallengelight

Visit The Daily Post at Word Press to view additional photos submitted for this week’s challenge:  Let there be light!

*cited in:

Haiku Master Buson

Yuki Sawa & Edith Shiffert

weekly photo challenge: eerie

for the cuckoo I wait

here in the capital beneath the vain skies of hoping ~Buson*

waiting....Toronto airport

waiting….Toronto airport

visit WordPress’s weekly photo challenge to view additional images submitted for the theme: eerie

*cited in:

The Classic Tradition of Haiku

Ed: Faubion Bowers

memory

if I go to heaven I will forget you,

and

if I go to hell you will forget me.*

memoryportraiture

self portraiture created through the use of mixed media

In China a person who will not forget the past is described as ‘one who did not drink Old Lady Meng’s soup.’ Borrowed from Buddhist folklore, Old Lady Meng dispenses the Broth of Oblivion to souls leaving the last realm of the underworld on their way to reincarnation. After drinking her soup, the soul is directed to the Bridge of pain that spans a river of crimson water. There, two demons lie in wait: Life-Is-Not-Long and Death-is-Near. They hurl the soul into waters that will lead to new births.

Old Lady Meng is more than a quaint antidote for the Greeks’ Mnemosyne. She embodies a psychological understanding about the forces that promote, indeed demand, forgetting for the sake of ongoing life.  It is not enough to note that water is linked with amnesia in Chinese folklore as much the same way that the river Lethe is associated with forgetting in Greek mythology. The challenge here is to make sense of the distinctively Chinese attachment to remembrance in spite of the benefits of Old Lady Meng’s soul.

In Jewish tradition, too, the benefits of amnesia were acknowledged along with the sacred commitment to recollection. There is a midrash, or Torah-based story, that teaches us a lesson similar to that of Lady Meng: ‘God granted Adam and Eve an all-important blessing as they were about to leave the Garden of Eden: I give you, He said, ‘the gift of forgetfulness.” What is so precious about amnesia? Why would God, who demands fidelity to memory, offer the relief from recollection? Perhaps it is because without some ability to forgive and forget me might become bound by grudges and hatred. To remember everything may be immobilizing. To flee from memory, however, leads to an ever more debilitating frenzy.(40-41)**

source:

*Arang and the Magistrate

Munhwa broadcasting corporation 

**Bridge Across Broken Time

Vera Schwarcz

weekly photo challenge: horizon

Every life is a point of view directed upon the universe. Strictly speaking, what one life sees no other can. Every individual, . . . is an organ, for which there can be no substitute, constructed for the apprehension of truth . . . Without the development, the perpetual change and the inexhaustible series of adventures which constitute life, the universe, or absolutely valid truth, would remain unknown . . . Reality happens to be like a landscape, possessed of an infinite number of perspectives, all equally veracious and authentic. The sole false perspective is that which claims to be the only one there is. ~José Ortega y Gasset

horizon

visit WordPress’ Weekly Photo Challenge to view additional images submitted for this week’s theme:  horizon.