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Author Topic: treetops  (Read 362 times)
Theo
Serious
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(camera+computer)+(imagery+imagination)=Art


« on: January 06, 2009, 12:15:33 AM »




yours

http://theodoreblackphotography.com/tbp_1/images2/treetop.jpg
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Theodore Black
habakuk
The Pixelator
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« Reply #1 on: January 09, 2009, 02:04:04 PM »

What changes, if we don't see the roots of a tree top? What changes if we don't know the roots of any living thing, while we look at the outermost branches...

While I do like the tree details, the plasticity, the abstraction you chose with that crop - I am pretty much baffled by that ring. First I thought I have to clean my screen, then I thought it might be a unwanted artefact but I think you chose that deliberately as "the sun", right?  I love the idea of the sun being in that position, but I can hardly enjoy the way it looks here.

cheers
®

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eob
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« Reply #2 on: January 09, 2009, 05:49:46 PM »

This is one of those images, IMHO, that desperately need an explanation of the concept by the creator (and I don't mean: God Wink ).
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eob

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aprilS
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« Reply #3 on: January 15, 2009, 08:06:40 PM »

"Simplify" is something that's drilled into photographers: try to find the essence; distill what's essential; eliminate distractions.

At what point does that become simplistic?

I enjoy this graphic treatment of a difficult subject: what it's like to look up and see bare tree branches against a blank winter sky. The wide format suggests, to me, the expanse of the horizon viewed from where I stand -- so I remain "grounded". While the sun/ring echoes the rounded crown of the tree, the delicacy of it's branches; and both are rising even in winter.

That's what I impart to this image.
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Regards,
April

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