By G. E. Shuman
Vacation season is about over. For
most families the camper is put away, the pool is due for its fall
cleaning (as soon as the leaves finish filling it up), the
motorcycles and barbecue grills are still in use, but much less than
weeks ago, and the kids are back in school. Yes, vacation season,
for the most part, is over. So is all the sunny-day picture-taking
fun that goes along with that season.
My daughter Emily is a photographer.
Although she is barely seventeen years old, her talents with a camera
are fairly well known in our area. She has taken many senior
portraits, and has done at least three weddings already. She has a
real knack for seeing and catching the moment; for 'taking' pictures.
I was thinking about her, and about
this subject of picture-taking several days ago, and the English
teacher in me made me think about the give and take of the way we
phrase things. You see, when we talk about photography, we do refer
to it as 'taking' pictures. Strangely, we do not think of artists as
'taking' anything when they draw or paint a scene on paper or canvas,
even though they are attempting to copy the likeness of someone or
some thing. They actually 'give', in their craft, it seems. Pen,
pencil or brush strokes put down on the paper or canvas the
impression expressed by the artist's mind, through his or her hand.
Not quite so with photography. Photography is an invention which
does more than portray something simply through the eyes of the
picture-'taker'. Photography copies what is actually there. It
grabs... it 'takes' pictures. The quality of today's digital
photography is almost scary-good, in its ability to capture a moment,
freeze an expression, or steal a scene. (I know. I tend to over
think things. I get boring when I do that, and I am sorry.)
Sometimes, when I look closely at a
face in a picture, I am reminded that Native Americans, many years
ago, when photography was a very new science, did not allow their
picture to be 'taken' at all. They, with a degree of wisdom others
might not have understood at the time, expressed that when a picture
was 'taken', so was the soul of the person in the portrait. There
was something, to them, that was wrong in capturing that split second
of a person's life, and displaying it over and over to onlookers.
Although we, today, know the reality of what photography actually is,
I have wondered recently if those Native American people might have
been onto something. They were not, scientifically, correct, but in
some ways they were far from completely wrong. You see, what they
were seeing, when they saw a picture of a person, was a momentary
outward appearance of that person, and that outward appearance
revealed the person's feelings at that moment... it displayed their
'soul', if you will.
Something else that photography does,
although there is nothing necessarily wrong with this, is that it
'freezes' time. It 'takes' time, as we take a picture. One company,
years ago, actually advertised that with their film and cameras you
could 'capture the moment'. Well, isn't that the true purpose of
photography in the first place? Back in the days of film cameras, I
have no idea how much film I wasted taking multiple pictures of one
scene, in efforts to capture the moments of my family's lives without
missing anything. My home is filled with pictures of past
Christmas's, birthday parties, graduations, and weddings, all for the
one purpose of being able to re-live those events, because those
events meant so much to us at the 'time'.
You take pictures. I take pictures.
My daughter Emily takes GORGEOUS pictures, and would love to take
yours, if you ever need her to. (That was a shameless plug for her.)
These days, nearly everyone takes them, and loves to take them. If
this were not so, a seemingly unrelated electronic audio device (the
cell phone) would never have evolved to also be a camera. Those
manufacturers really know how to grab us, don't they?
Life is very short. People and things
change. Your parents don't look like they did ten years ago.
Neither does your wife, your child, or your grandmother. Everyone
has aged, except for me, and that's only because all you see of me is
the ten year old picture that lurks around one corner of this column
week after week.
Here's another thought, and then I'm
going to stop thinking and boring you, I promise. It has been said
that the eyes are the windows to the soul. Well, when you look at a
cherished picture of a loved one, from the past, what is the first
thing you see? To what are your eyes immediately drawn? They are
drawn, exactly as in real life, to that other person's eyes. It is
in the eyes that we can truly see the person, and can almost sense
their heart, their soul, their thoughts, no matter how old the
picture is. In fact, the most common phrase someone might say when
taking your picture, is to “Smile,” and “look at the camera.”
Pictures really do freeze time in the
windows to the soul. This fall, get your family outside under that
big maple tree, and 'capture the moment.'
1 comment:
I love it! I love your take on it, and that you put in a plug for your daughter. Yes, she does take gorgeous pictures!
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