Our world is so complicated, it can be quite a challenge to find the simple gesture or moment that allows you to refresh and refocus. Recently I happened upon a guided meditation featuring the chime of a bell that helped bring me to do just that. It's simple to download and takes about 10 minutes to go through the exercise.
When it was over I felt a sense of calm and peacefulness and I highly recommend it. You can find an explanation of the exercise here and a discussion of contemplative practices here.
You can find other guided meditations from the Center here. The bell meditation is guided by physicist Arthur Zajonc who is also the academic director of the Center for Contemplative Mind in Society.
Exploring innovation, creativity and vision with a particular interest in the visual arts
Monday, July 30, 2012
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
The Joy of Being, Part Two
"Following your dream" often takes you down a road less traveled. And therein lies the fear and fascination in starting the journey. Believing in your vision, laying it on the line and opening yourself up to whatever you may encounter also means taking a big risk. And hopefully, creating work that is unique and engaging.
That's what propels photographer Ian Ruhter's pursuit of "Silver and Light". In one sense, it's what he calls the technical approach he uses to create his images, incorporating a huge bellows camera and a photographic process developed 160 years ago.
And at a time when innovators in modern image-making have mostly embraced the digital domain, Ruhter returned to an early photographic technique to capture one-of-a-kind pieces using the wet plate collodian process that was adapted so effectively by Matthew Brady during the Civil War. And so brilliantly by artist Sally Mann.
Here are some examples of his work:
You can see his photographs are at once realistic and some what abstracted, as if portraying an ancient view of a modern scene. And each image holds some portions in quite sharp focus while other areas have a soft, gauzy quality. Which creates a more dreamy, almost mysterious mood. In a sense, you see what is there, but you also experience it as a moment removed from time and place.
It's a space at once familiar and strange, and that makes us pay attention. I think each image offers us a window into the world that Ruhter is trying to show us. And I think that's the other part of what he's after. Check out the video "Silver & Light" where Ruhter lays out his vision and describes his artistic process. And you can see more images at his blog and at his website.
I don't think every photograph works, but I appreciate what he's trying to do and the risk he's taking to accomplish it.
Ian Ruhter/Alchemist |
And at a time when innovators in modern image-making have mostly embraced the digital domain, Ruhter returned to an early photographic technique to capture one-of-a-kind pieces using the wet plate collodian process that was adapted so effectively by Matthew Brady during the Civil War. And so brilliantly by artist Sally Mann.
Here are some examples of his work:
You can see his photographs are at once realistic and some what abstracted, as if portraying an ancient view of a modern scene. And each image holds some portions in quite sharp focus while other areas have a soft, gauzy quality. Which creates a more dreamy, almost mysterious mood. In a sense, you see what is there, but you also experience it as a moment removed from time and place.
It's a space at once familiar and strange, and that makes us pay attention. I think each image offers us a window into the world that Ruhter is trying to show us. And I think that's the other part of what he's after. Check out the video "Silver & Light" where Ruhter lays out his vision and describes his artistic process. And you can see more images at his blog and at his website.
I don't think every photograph works, but I appreciate what he's trying to do and the risk he's taking to accomplish it.
Monday, July 23, 2012
The Joy of Being, Part One
I've been wading through the river of thoughts and imaginings that flow by me, casting about for the next post for The Vision Thing. And today, I've found several. They are quite unrelated, except they all celebrate the joy of being.
The first is a well-cultivated "spontaneous" event. And while the event was well-planned and carefully crafted, it has all the sense of surprise and adventure that serendipity invites into our lives. And I love those moments of happenstance that randomly connect us to something larger and more intriguing than what lies on the path we think we're following.
Here's a link to the video "We are Sabadell flash mob" created by Banco Sabadell celebrating the 130th Anniversary of its founding. Yes, it's a commercial, but it's also an Ode to Joy. Definitely worth checking out.
The first is a well-cultivated "spontaneous" event. And while the event was well-planned and carefully crafted, it has all the sense of surprise and adventure that serendipity invites into our lives. And I love those moments of happenstance that randomly connect us to something larger and more intriguing than what lies on the path we think we're following.
Here's a link to the video "We are Sabadell flash mob" created by Banco Sabadell celebrating the 130th Anniversary of its founding. Yes, it's a commercial, but it's also an Ode to Joy. Definitely worth checking out.
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