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Photography, Black & White on Paper
Size: 24 W x 16 H x 0.1 D in
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I am very fond of this photograph from the Danube River in Budapest, Hungary. There is a wall and a bridge in the picture. The wall is like a barrier, whereas the bridge allows us to cross, to reach the “other side”. Who or what would be the figure that’s looking across, to the other side, with a child in her arms? All the elements are in place to allow each one of us to imagine, to build our own scenario and play it in our head. The figure stands at the junction of the wall and the bridge, and it gives me the strange feeling of having to make a choice between the wall and the bridge. One thing seems certain: the figure is waiting. What for? We don’t know, but what I’ve noticed is that there’s a need to decide to stop waiting. Choosing the wall means staying in the comfort of a well-known territory. It means, to accept our limits and to give up advancing towards the unknown, towards new experiences and new discoveries. Picking the bridge means to advance. It always means possible mistakes as well, but we learn mainly from our errors, not from our successes. So, we shouldn’t be afraid of making mistakes, because they are a source of growth in understanding and consciousness. This is a choice we all have to make occasionally. We all reach a point where we have to decide whether we have had enough… or on the opposite, we wish to continue and conquer new challenges. Those territories that we conquer aren’t physical. These are “spaces of consciousness”, and as long as we shall continue to expand our consciousness – i.e. choose the bridge- we will be alive. Selecting the wall is to decide to put safety above everything else. It is selecting to survive instead of being alive. I wish all of you to always remember that every wall is meant to be broken, because behind every wall there is a path…. be it a bridge or something else. The alternative is simple: if you don’t break the wall, then the wall will break you. Don’t ever let that happen.
2014
Black & White on Paper
20
24 W x 16 H x 0.1 D in
Not Framed
No
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Israel.
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I began my adventure with Photography at the age of 20, in 1976, in France. At that time, I was practicing Street Photography during the day, working as a taxi driver during the night and as an assistant to an Advertisement Photographer during the weekends. All that, to make a living in Paris. Four years later, I had to make a choice between Photography and Philosophy, and so I decided to go with Philosophy. I never stopped “shooting” with a camera, but during the next 29 years, I practiced Photography more as a “devoted amateur” than as a professional. In 1986, I relocated to Tel-Aviv, Israel, where I founded the local branch of the New Acropolis school of Philosophy. About twenty years later, in 2008, I made my way back to Photography adding to it my Philosophical experience. Philosophy, for me is what reveals the meaning of life. Art is the way I have chosen to approach this meaning. The camera is the medium I use to capture the hidden beauty present in life, all around us, and my photographs allow me to make this invisible beauty visible and to offer it for all to see. This specific combination of Philosophy and Photography is also emphasized my work called “PhotoSophy”. It is reflected in a blog, as well as in an album-book and various exhibitions seen countries as Israel, France, Austria, and India. As a Street Photographer, I use the technical aspect of the camera as an instrument for expressing my philosophical vision and way of life. Thus, I use minimal equipment: a single lens (28 mm) full frame camera. No flash, no tripod and no artificial effects…. I always shoot in “Manual” mode, which leaves the technical decision to the photographer, and not to the software. I believe that the technical aspect should be as “transparent” as possible, as to not conceal the essence of the picture. This means that mastering it is essential because only then the technical aspect can be forgotten. It is the only way the photographer can focus his feelings and intuitions on his art. A picture is much more than the way a person can describe it. The most important thing in a picture is invisible. It is an emotion, a sentiment, a nostalgia, harmony. For me, a good picture does not reflect the subjectivity of the photographer. It captures the state of a particular moment – the moment in which the photographer chose to close the shutter – and this moment is chosen because the photographer recognizes it – consciously or not – as a “Decisive Moment”.
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