November 2024
Intermediate to advanced
228 pages
3h 36m
English
“Don’t tell me the moon is shining,” urged Russian writer Anton Chekhov, “show me the glint of light on broken glass.” His advice to those who hoped to be writers echoes the advice of American painter Robert Henri, who implored his students to “paint the flying spirit of the bird, rather than its feathers.” Both exhortations are more directly expressed, if not less poetically, in the photographic advice to shoot what it feels like, not what it looks like.
The photograph can be many things as experienced by the viewer. It can be a document of record, an image that, in visual language, tells us the moon is shining: ...
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