Category Archives: Trips East

Reflections on Water Reflections

A few weeks ago, I spent a couple of days photographing details around the public docks in New Bedford MA.  There’s a commercial fishing fleet there and the boats are brightly painted. For those so inclined, this provides unusually good conditions for observing the mercurial nature of reflecting water.

Abstract photography can mean a lot of different things. These days there’s more things to cook up with photographs than there are with potatoes. Abstractions can be entirely manufactured in Photoshop–which is fine. But let’s face it–you can end up taking the photo out of the graph in the process.

Being a traditionalist, I’m biased toward abstract images that you have to go out and find.  Maybe it’s the hunter-gatherer in me, or maybe it’s because it’s a bit like dumpster diving. In truth, it’s probably more related to the dismay I feel after draining away the day in front of a computer.

The New Bedford Docks were crawling with abstractions. They were ubiquitous: water…boats, and peeling paint.  The job was simple. I had to capture them with my camera, while trying to ignore the inquisitive looks of the fishermen.

The first photographer to achieve any degree of notoriety for abstractions was Aaron Siskind. A half century ago, he found lots of meaning in scrufty paint, parts of signs and other random stuff. If you enjoy black and white photography without a frame of reference, Google him and you might be impressed.

There’s a lot of debates in camera clubs these days about what constitutes an “abstraction”. Purists argue that the viewer should remain completely clueless as to what they’re looking at. I’m no hardliner when it comes to this. If you figure out that it’s a picture of reflecting water, then so be it. One of my photographer friends thinks I should be calling some of my pictures “semi-abstractions”. I’m fine with that too, as long as it doesn’t mean it’s something like decaf coffee.

Abstract or semiabstract, water is a different animal.

The photograph above was recruited from the reflections formed by two docked boats. I’m not a musician but I like improvisation. As far as I can tell, this is about as close as it comes to improvising with a camera.  You watch the water and shoot on impulse. When it feels right, that’s the time. You’re playing visual jazz, so to speak.  Photographing reflections requires getting into the flow of changing events. That’s another thing I like about it. It seems like good practice for life in general.

The image above is entitled Reverie, and I’ve also made a sister image which I entitled Daydream:

http://johntodaro.wordpress.com/gallery-2-intimacy/daydream/

24 Abstractions: New Photographs From New Bedford

The photographs were taken last week at the commercial fishing docks in New Bedford, Massachusetts. The project involved about two hours on Monday afternoon and a bit more time the following morning. (Photograph # 16 was actually shot a few days later on Shelter Island). There are close-up details (and reflections) of boats, and studies of metal and wood surfaces from around the docks. In truth, many of these images could be more accurately described as semi-abstract. One image (ninth down from the top)  has a school of small fish swimming across it. All were shot without a tripod which encouraged a free-flowing sense of connecting ideas.

New Bedford is a city with a waterfront revitalization in progress and is worth visiting if you’re in southern New England. The National Park Service administers New Bedford Whaling National Historic Park which includes a museum and visitor center located within walking distance of where the pictures were made.

Any of the thumbnails above can be enlarged by clicking on them. Email me if you have any questions about what you’re looking at.

Thinking About Margaret Todd…but really Charles Todd

About twelve years ago we took a trip in June to Bar Harbor and the northeast coast of Maine. June is the foggiest month of the year and we were visiting a state that pretty much wrote the book on the stuff. On the morning of our flight home from Bangor I took a series of pictures of the Margaret Todd.

My wife (who has more patience than she knows), waited back at the motel with our three year old while I put the Hasselblad through its paces.

Todd is a name that strikes a chord with me because long before I was born it was the same name that three of my uncles adopted. Seventy five years ago, they were running from something that no longer matters to Italian Americans. When I was a kid growing up in Florida none of that concerned me, because they were strangers with no children who lived in other places. The only one we’d hear about was the one who sent us a Christmas Card.

Every year it was signed “Charlie”.

Charles Todd, my uncle, came with an interesting story.  I grew up knowing that he was a portrait painter and that he’d studied at the Art Students League in Manhattan. Years later I realized that he probably was there at the same time as Jackson Pollock, and when Thomas Hart Benton was on the faculty. Once, during the 1980′s, I ran into a woman at an art show who had modeled for him at the League many years earlier. For the most part, my uncle’s aspirations were derailed by the Great Depression. For a period, he was employed by the WPA to paint murals in Post Offices and other public buildings, but he wasn’t destined to be a career artist. He spent the rest of his life delivering mail in New York City (the irony of which he must’ve appreciated). Over the years, he picked up his brushes on weekends, or when he got occasional commissions for portraits.

My uncle’s mystique grew as I arrived in my middle school years. Sometime around 1968 he won a city-wide art contest held by the Postal Service for all its employees. He made the cover of The Daily News. I own a copy of that newspaper along with the two paintings which were featured on the cover. It’s all down in my basement in storage.

In the mid ’60′s when we spent two summers on Long Island, I discovered that my uncle didn’t have much interest in bygones. We’d sometimes meet him down at Sheepshead Bay where he kept a boat. The man I got to know was a droll, quiet guy who who sported a pencil-thin mustache. There was a likable sense of weariness about him that seemed alien compared to the rest of my family. He had a wife (who I never met), and she was not the woman he loved. One day he showed up with Eleanor, a sexy woman in her late fifites who knew how to lose her past. Later, it became fairly obvious that the woman in shorts leaning against the dock had been modeling for him for years.

She was also my aunt’s best friend.

After that, his affairs were only discussed in hushed tones by my mother and my father.   I now know that there were many complexities in his relationship with his wife,  but because of my youth I formed a mental picture of a lonely and beautiful woman which I carry with me to this day.

My uncle loved the sea. Despite the advancing years, he bore a striking resemblance to the wiry guy in the old black and white Navy photograph which we kept in the box with the pictures. One afternoon when I was about ten or eleven he invited us out on his boat. My brother, father and I drove to the marina in Brooklyn. Eleanor was there, and everyone was a little tense. We climbed on board, assembling awkwardly in the cabin. My uncle slowly guided us out of the harbor and then leaned into the throttle taking us swiftly to the middle of the bay. He idled the engine; it was breezy, a little choppy–and no one had much to say. With a cigarette between two fingers, Eleanor opened a cooler and handed us cans of soda. My uncle, who had no patience for small talk, placed me at the wheel. We took off. In amazement, I steered the boat for several miles. I felt like I’d been granted an unexpected right of passage.

I only saw my uncle a few times after that.

One of those times was during my late teens when he visited us on a frigid autumn weekend. I hadn’t seen him in a while, and because of my advancing interest in art I was really looking forward to a chat. In retrospect, it  was a memorable day. My uncle and I had a one-one-one…a short but satisfying conversation under a pallid florescent light. We were in the basement in the room that my father filled up with second hand furniture.

That was the only time I ever heard my uncle talk about the old masters.

The last time I saw him was in a musty hospital somewhere in New York City. He was dying, but I can’t remember why and was too overwhelmed to inquire about it at the time. He was in pain and waved us off because he wanted no visitors.

It was another thirty years before I’d photograph the Margaret Todd. I have a hard time imagining my uncle with any interest in color photography. He would’ve been polite enough to critique my images because I was his nephew. He was a well-trained colorist in a time when other things mattered to artists. In another sense, I can easily envision him admiring the Margaret Todd because for him,  she would’ve evoked the sea.

What I’ll never know is whether the graceful lines and soft colors of the photograph would have had any further meaning.

Images of Autumn Wetlands – Winchester NH

We took a trip to Massachusetts over the weekend which included a foray across the state line into southern New Hampshire. These images are from wetlands near Winchester related to the Ashuelot River. The Ashuelot, as it turns out, flows into the Connecticut River on the Vermont border, which eventually empties into LI Sound only a few “crow miles” from where we live. While walking on a beach near Montauk a few years ago I found a plastic sign from a nature preserve in Keene NH (very near where I took these pictures). Amazingly, it had worked it’s way down the Connecticut River to end up on a saltwater beach on eastern Long Island.

Southwestern New Hampshire is not the location of the White Mountains and it’s safe to say it’s not the part of the state that attracts all the tourists. In spite of that, it’s pleasant here and the region has much going for it, not the least of which is a great deal of biodiversity. The same thing can be said of the Pioneer Valley of Massachusetts from the Quabbin reservoir west to the Berkshires.

With respect to the foliage this fall, the reports of a “dull” year seem to be true; but only if it’s being evaluated against most people’s expectations. Chasing “peak” colors around the north country is a good way to get frustrated, and with respect to photography, has never made much sense. There are many reasons for this, not the least of which is that the intensity of leaf color matters a lot less than whether it’s cloudy or windy. Plus, there are situations when faded colors work.

The bottom line is, don’t let anyone convince you to stay home on a dull year for foliage.

What I found over the weekend was that a subdued fall can result in a delicately colored pallet. The Ashuelot wetlands in the early morning fog were full of colors that would’ve been ruined on a more saturated year.

April Photographs, Shenandoah Valley

This gallery of nine images was pulled together from various points in and around the Blue Ridge Mountains, and includes work from Shenandoah National Park and the lovely Virginia State Arboretum located near Winchester. With the exception of Pears in Bloom (which I photographed two years ago), the work was all captured on last month’s Virginia trip.

If you’d like to know the title of a certain piece hold your cursor over it for a moment.  To see a picture enlarged – click on  it. That will open a carousel. You can open a picture outside the carousel by clicking on the “permalink”.

Chasing Down Redbuds Near Roanoke

Here’s another image from last week’s Virginia trip which pairs nicely with the one from yesterday’s post.  The third week in April, as it turned out, was the time for Eastern Redbuds and we spent an afternoon motoring around the spindliest roads on the Virginia Delorme Atlas looking for them. Our Toyota Echo performed well, requiring little gas and tucking itself onto the narrowest shoulders where it sniffed up spots to park. The only thing that makes this car grumpy is when you take it off the asphalt.

Back in high school we had a word for backroad rambles …shunpiking (a 19th century term describing the activity of those who avoid the main roads). We latched on. Apparently the word is falling out of use because it’s triggered a spell-check alarm. That doesn’t matter. I find it just as compelling now as I did back then.

As it turns out, it was in this same area of the Blue Ridge Mountains where I did some of my earliest shunning of pikes. Likewise, it was also where where I shot some of my first color landscapes – similar spring scenes “recorded” on 35mm transparencies. In those days, getting results called for a lengthy drive home and a visit to Central Photo in Huntington, NY. The store was a hub of photographic activity for those of us in Suffolk County and a good place to hobnob with pros.

After I dropped off my film, I simply had to wait.  Several days would go by before the slides would be ready. Time grew slow and compressed like a bottle of sorghum, the thick sweetener we’d seen for sale down in Virginia’s mountains. This was not such a terrible thing. They were long days filled with big expectations and had the effect of extending the trip.

Redbuds, Blue Ridge Parkway – Shenandoah National Park

This post (an image of blooming Eastern Redbuds) is the first of several from last week’s trip to Virginia. Our circuit took us south through Richmond to the Zuni Pine Barrens and then west to the mountains which we followed north as far as you can go. On the Parkway, the bloom was well in progress below 2000 feet but tapered off dramatically above 2500′. The Parkway extends 460 miles through Virginia into the Smoky Mountains, passing through a variety of vegetative life zones. Amazingly, the 130 species of trees which grow along its roadsides are more than all the trees to be found in Europe. The Parkway was planned with attention to both aesthetics and drama. There are many overlooks and an endless array of undulating roadscapes.  This “curviness” discourages the urge to lean on the pedal, but if you’re in no hurry it’s one of the last places where driving can be a relaxing experience.

Roaming the Remote Beach: Sapelo Island, Georgia

These photographs were taken at the edge of a maritime forest which had been overtaken by encroaching dunes. I photographed these fallen branches in the first rays of sunlight on the Atlantic shore of Sapelo Island near the inlet separating it from Blackbeard Island.

Sapelo is a gem – one of the last outposts of Gullah culture in the United States. Its only access is by boat, and 98% of the island is protected. Tours are conducted by the Georgia Department of Natural Resources several times a week and lodging (and tours) may also be arranged with the residents of the community of Hog Hammock. Visitors to Sapelo must be part of an organized tour, or registered guests of residents. There’s a passenger ferry that operates from a Visitor Center in McIntosh County.

Sapelo is one of the lesser known Georgia Sea Islands, a bit north of Cumberland. A couple of years ago we vacationed there for three days and it’s still one of the best places I know for solitary beaches. It’s also an outstanding destination for those who would rather not have  to deal with a car. Bicycles are the preferred means of transportation. There are a number of possible routes on the island along it’s network of mostly unpaved roads. On the south end, there’s a lighthouse, and the Reynolds Mansion which is the location of the University of Georgia Marine Institute. Sapelo is a stunningly quiet place noted for its  pine forests, live oak and saw palmetto. More importantly, it’s an island with extraordinarily deep roots in African American history. There’s not many places like this left.

For more information about Sapelo you can visit the website of our host and lifelong resident, Cornelia Walker Bailey. I highly recommend her book:

http://www.gacoast.com/geecheetalk.html

Another good site:

http://www.sapeloislandbirdhouses.com/index.html

The images were photographed with a Contax G2 and a 28mm lens.

Floating Docks – York Harbor, Maine

This is an image from southern Maine – a group of floating docks receding into space, and thoroughly engulfed in fog.  In this sort of light, a photograph can be rendered with an extraordinary minimalism, reading much like thickly brushed ink on paper.

House In Fog With Orange Door – Eckley, Pennsylvania

This photograph was taken a few years ago at Eckley, an historic mining town in Northeastern Pennsylvania.  Nowadays it’s an unusually quiet place tucked into the mountains – two straight rows of company houses which face each other across a simple road.  At the time of our visit it was a place of abundant texture, because the laborious work of restoration had barely begun.

Much like the photographs in the two previous posts, this is a portrait of a building blending with its landscape. Again, a solitary structure photographed from the front in two dimensions without the intrusion of architectural perspective. I’ve done this habitually over the years, at first being unaware of my tendency. Over time, I’ve grown attached to this technique the same way one becomes fond of good advice. It’s not always the answer but it is a way of looking at things that has its own unusual language. I’m not exactly sure what’s going on aesthetically, but let’s take a stab at it.

An image of an old building taken directly front-on creates a facade – a face of sorts with character and personality. Under the right circumstances, this will have a tendency to simplify a composition rather than complicate it. Simplicity is good. This angle often represents the most lyrical view.  It can also hint at humor and at times can impart a desirable sense of the surreal. Importantly, these images defy the funneling effects of perspective, and bring a calm stability which keeps one’s eyes attached to surface qualities. Textures are enhanced in such pictures because they’re not competing with perspective. What appeals to me most in this image is the muted harmony of closely matched color values. The teal green of grass is both complimented and refreshed by the vertical orange door. In a dense fog, colors will often appear as similar grays, at least to the talented squinter.

House With Tin Roof – Eastern North Carolina

I found this abandoned farm house not far from the isolated eastern shores of Pamlico Sound,  a land of vast farm fields, pocosin swamps and plenty of peace and quiet. What gives it special meaning is that it’s also an iconic image of the American South, a part of the country I’m familiar with, having grown up in pre-Disney Florida. During the 1960′s we made sporadic trips north – summer journeys that would’ve taken me through miles of backroads and pine woods; places where houses like these were as common as crows. Finding them now is like stumbling upon friends I haven’t seen in a really long time.

Keeping with the theme of my recent posts, it’s also an image of a solitary building in a meaningful location which I elected to shoot head on. This time the photograph is a vertical because I craved the look of big space. I wanted it to breathe so I let in the sky. Thus, the scene is an airy one, full of the breeziness of mid-afternoon. Not all the best pictures require a setting sun.

More images of isolated buildings may be seen by clicking  on the link below:

http://johntodaro.wordpress.com/category/viewpoints/solitary-structures/

House With Red Roof, Gaspé, Québec

This piece will introduce a new category, one with an overly long and confusing title that definitely requires pruning:

Solitary dwellings, abandoned structures and other unattended human artifacts photographed within the greater landscape.

 

At the moment, I can’t think of a shorter way to say it, and if you have suggestions for a more truncated one – by all means post a comment.

Why put photographs into such a category in the first place? I’m not exactly sure, other than the fact that when I go back and look at what I’ve been doing for the last 35 years, obvious patterns emerge. I find myself peering through a camera at the lonely stuff we left behind; and if we hadn’t left it behind then there was probably no one home:

…a miners’ cabin in Eckley Pennsylvania…a capsized boat in Springs…an abandoned Chevy truck  on the plains of Colorado…the desolate corral in southern Utah…a house with a tin roof in North Carolina…the house with the red roof in Québec.

The list goes on and on even though I never set out to perform variations on a theme. I guess it just happened that way. Perhaps it’s because I take the pictures and the patterns take care of themselves.

Finding myself in front of the solitary houses was the beginning of the process. Next came the postures – how the stuff posed, where it was positioned relative to the camera. In each instance there was a right combination of things that evoked the desired mood.  For photographers, it can occur without warning. Things come together and you’ve arrived at your picture – and when that happens it feels something like it did back in middle school the first time you pulled open your combination lock. It’s why I like this job.

Again, the patterns:  A lonely house leashed with a power line. An abandoned home beneath the complex geometry of a storm.  One hundred and fifty years ago a photographer no doubt discovered that by shifting his position a few feet to the left, he set his picture ablaze with mood. This is key. With my own work, the moods have varied over time but hopefully not too much. If I’ve been doing my job right  I’ve just wanted the pictures to speak of simple things:

Solitude, detachment and fluidity.  If a photograph of a house is able to convey something timeless, that’s wonderful.  But if it also suggests something about the passage of time, then that is a picture with a taste for one of our finest paradoxes. Sometimes my pictures have gotten there but others have fallen short.  All honest photographers know there’s luck involved.

Over the coming weeks I’ll be posting more of this work – photographs of the lonely stuff out there in the landscape.

I’ve come up with a shorter title:

Solitary Structures:

http://johntodaro.wordpress.com/category/viewpoints/solitary-structures/

Appomattox – Two Photographs

In April 1865, the Civil War found its much-needed resolution in the tiny crossroads village of Appomattox Court House in central Virginia. On the morning of the ninth a small battle was fought near here, and the afternoon arrived with the winds of surrender. Grant, Lee and thousands of troops gathered within view of the eastern flank of the Blue Ridge Mountains, and in a small house, papers were signed that would put it all to rest.  The owner had moved to the area after watching his home get shelled at First Bull Run. Despite some initial reluctance he opened his doors, thus becoming a witness to both the beginning and end of the war.

The area is now administered by the National Park Service and If you’re of the mistaken opinion that the Federal Government does nothing good with your money – you should plan a visit soon. We were there on a recent April break within a few days of the anniversary. We’d traveled south from Gettysburg, having visited a number of similar sites all managed by the Park Service.  In each of these places, the exhibits, grounds, and even the gift shops, were full of extraordinary and well-presented information.

The day at Appomattox was breezy, and unseasonably cold. The sun was hesitating and storm clouds were blowing across Virginia like they meant business. I stepped outside because the skirmish between shade and light was now catching my attention. It was one of those ambiguous spring days that comes with a hunch of incoming rain but soon convinces you otherwise. The shifting moods seemed appropriate given the significance of the place. Likewise, the terrain was hard to pin down. The historic buildings that dot the fields of the monument sit upon grounds that could be described as somewhere between hilly and not.  The barns and other structures are spaced with an a airy distance between them but remain close enough to convey a sense of neighborhood. From any doorway in Appomatox you’ve generally got a view of another but not without a healthy serving of rural landscape. The fields, fences and mountains convey an ambient sense of human presence in the natural world, and in this case, the presence is benign. It’s apropos that a place this important to our collective history comes with a view of clouds.  I  put a camera on my tripod and began to wander.

I took several pictures that afternoon but it’s these two that caught the mood. Again, opposing sides are studied. In this case, a pair of photographs that combine interior and exterior subjects. In the vertical picture, the viewpoint is from a partially draped window with wavy antique glass. There is uncertainty – a mood amplified by the old glass and its somewhat distorted view of the neighboring brick building. The tall home stands behind a picket fence beneath dark clouds.

In the horizontal picture, the point of view is that of an unseen occupant. Someone is in a doorway. The door divides the image abruptly in the foreground from another building in the distance. There are fences. The sky is turbulent and grey, with a hopeful patch of blue.

There’s contrast in the each of the pictures. It’s the marriage of line and light that can bring about resolution.

Pond Details from the Quabbin Region



We spent three days recently in the area around Northampton and Amherst Massachusetts, a very likable pair of college towns which provided a good base of operations for locating nearby ponds. If you travel fifteen miles east of Amherst, you’re in the woods surrounding the Quabbin Reservoir, a man-made lake which was dammed  70 years ago for Boston’s water supply. Ironically this has become the wildest place in Massachusetts, complete with a thriving population of moose. On the north and east sides of Quabbin you come to a string of tiny villages which have the appearance of having survived intact from much earlier times – one is New Salem, another is Petersham. It’s a detail of a one acre pond that we found near New Salem that’s the subject of my first image (above) – a piece which is hard to not to entitle Calligraphy. I  took a few variations of this picture, but found myself mostly waiting around for the empty spaces in between the breezes (something that for photographers can result in much wasted time). During the hiatus, I located a raft of candy-colored leaves on a bed of floating pine needles. Later at Petersham’s Harvard Pond, we found a picturesque body of water with a prominent island of white pines – a worthy subject, but again I was fixed on details. This time a photograph with more ingredients than a birthday cake: pond grasses, a flotilla of confetti leaves, a smudge of reflecting orange foliage and a partly submerged branch.

 

In A Mist

The triptych of images below explores three variations on scenes shot in fog, falling snow or low contrast. In each instance, I’ve used short focal length telephoto lenses. This combination of lens and light can result, at times, in a beguiling compression of space.

Much like Beiderbecke’s piano mist, if you’ve succeeded at this, you’ve arrived at something that’s both simple and lyrical.

In the first piece, the lens of choice has been the very petite 90mm f2.8 Sonnar, a Zeiss optic which was made for the Contax G2 rangefinder. Much like it’s sister Leica, the G2 had superb balance and unsurpassed resolution. This 90mm lens is my favorite telephoto, and when it’s installed on its camera with its metal lens hood, it’s easy to imagine you’re handling a well-constructed musical instrument.

The second and third pieces were recorded with a Canon G10- a much-discussed digital camera that comes with its own virtues. Resembling a tiny Leica, the G10 allows you to capture, review and edit images with ease. Unexpectedly, I’ve found that it’s empowered me to move from one thought to another much in the same fashion as an improvising jazz musician.

Pears In Bloom
Grace Estate
             Stony Hill

Pears In Bloom, Grace Estate and Stony Hill are available as limited edition signed prints. The first print in the edition for Grace Estate is available for sale. The first prints for Pears in Bloom and Stony Hill are no longer available.

If you are interested in ordering or would like to set up an appointment to visit my studio in East Hampton, New York, email me at:

johntodaro1@verizon.net

To visit my website, go to:

http://johntodaro.com/

In a Mist may be heard here:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=q_3m4bbsLdc