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Thursday
Dec042008

Exploring the Details

 

 

I do not travel to follow itineraries. I travel to see whatever I happen to see. All it takes is a willingness to wander, to make mistakes, to ask for help, to observe, to follow my instincts, to face fears and step outside my comfort zone. -Ordinary Sparkling Moments

 

Whenever anyone asks me what I do for a living, I always smile and say, “I am an artist”. Questions then follow about the kind of work I do and what inspires me, and while all of these exchanges are among the most pleasant for me (I mean really, I get to say I’m an artist...an artist!) I have lately been wondering if I should toss all formalities aside and try to express the more fundamental truth of what I do. More than being an artist, a writer or anything else, I am a wanderer, a dreamer, and an explorer. Whether I am on a journey across the Pacific or sitting in my studio pondering my place in the world, my fierce passion for explorations of any kind is what feeds my creative work more than anything else, and it is the tiniest of details in these wanderings that give me the deepest sense of delight.

 

I have been incredibly blessed to have traveled to many beautiful parts of the world, and on every excursion, there are two items that are always with me: my journal and my camera. I have been known to write journal entries as I’m walking down cracked sidewalks in Havana and as a woman obsessed with graffiti art in Buenos Aires. I am constantly writing, sketching, photographing and observing, trying to capture all the minutiae of new cities, unfamiliar neighborhoods and foreign cultures. Then when I arrive back home, notes, images and doodles in hand, I let all these bits and pieces spill forth so that I can re-assemble them in an entirely new way. I use my photography to express all the subtleties I saw, sensed and experienced in places where I could not understand the language yet still perhaps felt strangely at home.

 

To allow yourself to dive deep into the tiniest of details in any environment is to open yourself up to colors, images and textures that might go unnoticed if you’re always looking up at the skyscrapers, so to speak. There is so much to see and admire on the ground, in a drugstore window, in the layers of paint on an old building. I find that the more I let my eyes stay focused on one small area, the more I comprehend the real flavor of a city and a culture. In Tokyo, the artful details of their manhole covers helped me understand their appreciation for beauty. In Havana, the peeled paint, broken windows and piles of rubble let any visitor know this was a city lost in time. In Buenos Aires, the political nature of their graffiti gave me a glimpse of the tension still deeply felt by a city with a dark, complicated past. The personality, history and passions of any city, town or neighborhood can be found in its details, by looking in the most minuscule of spaces and letting that take up your entire field of vision.

 

You don’t need to travel across the globe to explore life’s details. This is a technique you can use anywhere, anytime, even in your own home. What if you took an afternoon to explore the details of your home with your camera? What would those images say about you, your family, your routines, your likes and dislikes? Giving time and attention to the smaller corners of your own living space with your camera can help hone the muscle that notices tiny sparkles in unexpected places. Then you can use those skills to capture all the peculiar, radiant, mysterious charms of any location, near or far, at any time of the year in any part of the world.

 

Take your time. Observe. Look closer. Let yourself get lost in the details.

 

Photo and guest post courtesy of artist extraordinaire Christine Mason Miller (aka Swirly Girl). Christine has graciously offered a copy of her book Ordinary Sparkling Moments to one lucky reader. If you want in on the action leave a comment here to be included in the drawing. 

Congratulations to Bridge of Ride the Waves of Life the winner of the wonderful offerings from Jen Lemen.

Reader Comments (167)

What a great post to remind of us the details. Sometimes it's not always the big picture. I would love to win a copy of her book,
December 4, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterSue Carter
This post was inspiring and insightful. Thank you. This book looks like a treasure. I'll keep my fingers crossed you chose me!
December 4, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterTina
Beyond my own personal travels, I think the greatest gift I have found is flickr ...I have met amazing journalistic photographers who tell the stories of other cultures and peoples...this is my armchair (computer chair) to the world! To be able to interact with these creative talented individuals is incredibly humbling and inspiring...
so yes, I would love to be "gifted" in this giveaway but if not, I feel incredibly "rich" and "enriched" already!
December 4, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterLila
One of my favourite details photos is of the hands of a woman in India holding the rope to pull her boat ashore...
http://www.flickr.com/photos/fumblingforwords/2414060286/in/set-72157604528050749/
December 4, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterHeather
you know, I do that all the time outdoors, but have never thought to do it indoors! It seems like a perfect winter activity.
December 4, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterelizabeth
After reading this.... how could I not want a WHOLE book authored by her?
December 4, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterbleachusd
my fingers are crossed:)
xo
D
December 4, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterdiane*v
I would love to capture an ordinary sparkling moment.
December 4, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterlizziemarie
I still have a lot to learn about photography but one of the things I noticed when I first started out on this journey was being surprised when looking at photos of familiar things and seeing things in the photo that I somehow had never seen in viewing it everyday. That process has helped train my eye to see things differently and to notice the details daily.
December 4, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterrghdrft
....a sparkly moment on a recent walk...
http://www.flickr.com/photos/22733432@N08/3083306419/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/22733432@N08/3084144282/
....everything is in the details...
December 4, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterGail
I cannot even begin to describe how deeply this post has related to my soul. It has given even greater clarity to the journey path I am on. I am so thankful for it today, and will be revisiting it more than once to saturate myself fully in its wisdom. Thank you for this blessing.
December 5, 2008 | Unregistered Commentermaggie ann.
I'd love to have that kind of a relationship with photography- I'm trying to figure out how to become inspired :). Maybe this book would help?
December 5, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterAbbie
what a beautiful book count me in
December 5, 2008 | Unregistered Commentersarah
While I'm often caught looking up at skyscrapers, I like to see where they meet the sidewalk, too.
December 5, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterKimberly
im a reader, books are for me :)
December 5, 2008 | Unregistered Commentersammie
paying attention to details ... is living in the present moment ... here and now ... looking in wonders and smiling at small, simple, unique things and moments that surround us ... being part of that beauty ... thank you for sharing your vision d'artiste
December 5, 2008 | Unregistered Commenternathalie
I would love a new book!
December 5, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterKelley

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