In May I heard Dan Ballard speak at the Moab Photo Symposium. He had an excellent presentation about
getting out there and being present in the landscape. He told a story about being in a foreign
country and having to get up early every morning to hike out to his sunrise
location, but between his lodging and this landscape were a pack of stray
dogs. The image he wanted was relatively
specific and required a few natural elements to line up so he had to return to
his location on multiple occasions. Each
morning as the alarm went off and it was very, very dark, he had to convince
himself to “fight the dogs.”
So what did I do the next morning when the alarm went
off? Looked outside, saw stars (no
clouds), and went back to bed.
Seriously. When I got up an hour
later and looked outside, I saw the perfect puffy pink clouds of an amazing
morning. I did not fight the dogs. I didn’t even see the dogs.
I cannot tell you how many times I have heard the advice:
“Get out there! The only way to get the image is to be there!”
“Don’t be late for work! If the light is right when you arrive, you missed the shot!”
“Spending a day outside photographing is better than a day at the office.”
“Getting out is the hardest part!”
I have used these lines myself! And here I was, sleeping through a
photography weekend sunrise. FAIL.
While I did not heed Dan’s advice that weekend, the story
stuck with me and I related to the line “fight the dogs.” In my urban living situation, I do not have
any wild dogs standing between me and my photographic subjects, but I do have two adorable Italian
greyhounds who do not like to be disturbed while they are sleeping (which is
most of the time), especially in the morning.
As that line bounced around in my head, I started to develop
an idea. Not about getting out more, not
about early morning alarm clocks, but about all the hurdles standing between me
and better photography. There are
obstacles in every aspect of photography that make up the pack of stray dogs I
fight to improve my craft.
There are new computer programs, processing techniques, and
printing tutorials to learn, understand, and apply. I am influenced by what is popular on social
media causing me to ignore what I find inspirational. I feel the need to visit iconic locations to
shoot the sights I see online while also wanting to explore my landscape closer
to home. At the end of the day the
obstacles seem too great, the pack of dogs is too large, and I do nothing.
It is time that I commit to my needs as an artist and what I
have to do to improve. I must focus on
my vision and practice my craft to fulfill my potential.
Am I the only one or do you ever have to "fight the dogs?"
2 comments:
"Am I the only one or do you ever have to "fight the dogs?""
As I wake up to see yet another calm cool, perfect macro shooting morning and realize I should have been in the field an hour earlier. That would be a no. :-(
The dogs were barking and I realized that I slept right through it! I'm getting better though, and so will you. Keep up the good work, and keep learning.
Joel
Thanks, Joel! I am glad to hear that I am not alone! Best of luck and keep up the fight :-)
Anne
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