WOTG graphlog

Running projects, ideas, amenities and other strange things that live in my mind. In realtime (sort of). A sketchbook of plans, pictures and thoughts.

Metronome

February23

This is a study about the use of continuous shooting in photography, about sequences and about what I like to call subsequences.
While I was experimenting with Davide using a webcam in Webcamgrams, I’ve been tempted to bring the same concept outside the narrow environment of the video/computer short range of action. To shoot series of pictures in sequence is an easy thing, especially today that every camera has the continuous shooting mode.

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The problem, if anything, is to express something detached from reality through sequences because this kind of photos are so deep-rooted with time to naturally become a representation of a specific moment (beaten by the interval between the pictures) and a specific space (the place where the action happens which, for obvious reasons, it’s always the same for the entire sequence). I have to say that I’m still not completely pleased with the results, but I think I’m getting there.

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Something different, even if directly connected with the shooting in sequence, are the subequences. In mathematics, a subsequence is a sequence that originates from a larger sequence and it’s obtained deleting some of the original elements keeping the remaining ones in the original order. Translating it in photography, I see a subsequence as a very large series of pictures that can be modify in space but not in time. Let’s see if I can explain it better with a visual example:

garden_small

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This strange jigsaw is called “The garden” and was shot at my first home here in London. I walked through the little garden that was at the back of the house with my finger on the shutter release changing the framing while I was walking and then I reconstructed in Photoshop my route placing the pictures in a sequence that pauses and moves inside a rectangular space (which was similar to the original conformation of the garden). What I was trying to obtain was a faceted representation of the space obeying to the original sequence’s order but pausing from time to time to explore a specific fragment of space. The final result is (or it should be) a comprehensive view of the garden (with an intuitable specific shape and size, deducible by the existence of a predominant perspective) and, at the same time, a subsequence of pictures showing a more personal view of the place, with specific points of interests and an inner time sequence that should give the viewer the sensation of moving in first-person inside a graphic representation of the garden.

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