Friday, August 21, 2020
Night Vision
Night Vision This semester Iâm taking Intro to Photography. For the first half of the semester, we were thrown into the darkroom. It might as well be a time-machine (film? whatâs that?).and a time-warp. The darkroom is time-consuming. I spent countless hours over the last many weeks pouring, shaking, and sifting, not thinking much at all except keeping track of how long Iâve been doing each aforementioned action. Itâs brainpower-consuming I canât actually think about nothing when iâm trying out specific techniques to make what I see in my head manifest on paper. Itâs emotions-consuming when multiple test strips fail to produce what I want, I cry, if only there was a preview button. For all the inconveniences of the analog process, practicing making non-digital prints has actually done something extraordinary for my digital photography life. (Photography people, try not to shake your head too hard.) For the past two years that Iâve owned a DSLR, Iâve never used it on manual. But observing the effects of exposure, aperture, filters quite literally in the darkroom has made me much more curious about all those settings on my camera and the meaning of Instagram. Bottom-line: my friend whoâs also taking the class says she enjoys going to the darkroom because itâs âtherapeuticâ. I canât exactly disagree where else can you close your eyes, dream, and still be productive? Here are some of my works from the semester so far; the first is a rayogram, the rest are all 35mm prints. Feel free to ask any questions about artsy classes at MIT, or anything else!
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