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Archive for December, 2005

Bye Bye 2005

In a few hours 2005 will be over and we’ll be wandering through 2006. But how was my 2005?

Overall, it hasn’t been one the greatest years in my life. I’ve done and achieved personal goals, but I’ve also made lots of errors.
Of course I’ve learnt from these errors, but they’re still there hurting me every now and then.

2006 Resolutions

I’d like to fix what I’ve broken in my personal life during 2005 and hopefully come out better than what I expected.
I’d want to take my photographic skills to the next level: start printing my photos, maybe publish a book through Lulu and who knows, maybe organize an exhibition, too.
Another thing I’d like to do is starting something nice on the web. And when I say something nice I mean a web application that might gather some attention — and hopefully praise, too — through which I might manage to make few bucks… ;)
Oh, and I should start to take university more seriously!

Read the rest of this entry »

Is photography art?

Some time ago, I was talking with Scaruffo about photography and whether it is art or not.
He said photography is not art simply because it’s photography. Instead, it’s a mean which can be used to produce art. So it’s the subject that’s art, not photography.

In my humble opinion he is wrong. Indeed, I think the subject is a mean and the photograph is the piece of art.
And the explanation to this can be very simple: a picture conveys emotions, it can express a message and, as you might know, a photo is worth one thousand words.

I don’t think photographing means stealing reality. Reality in ways is fictitious and the act of stopping it into a frame make it something real.
Plus, it’s not simply choosing an existing subject, it’s about creating something unique: the angle, exposition, cropping, etc. Each photo is different from another, even if a photographer photograph the same subject in two different occasions.
So each photo is a unique piece. A unique piece of art.

A photo can make me feel as a painting can do. This is why photography should not be considered less artistic than painting.
There are bland photos, as there are bland paintings. There are profound paintings as there are profound photos.

The artistry in a photo is not all in the subject. Indeed painting for century was what photography is now: it portrayed reality. And the painter interpreted the real world as much as a photographer does.

To me photography it’s one of the finest forms of art available.

Note to Scaruffo’s assistants: if you want to answer in name of Scaruffo himself, but don’t want to bother writing the comment in English, write it in Italian and I’ll then translate it for everybody to read.

Update: read what Scaruffo has to say about this.

My 2005

Again, it’s that time of the year in which a good fad-follower blogger have to post a list summarizing the best in the past year.

So here’s my list. Read the rest of this entry »

Nine Stars

To hold nine Stars in my hands.

It’s everything I want.