LIGHT
We all walk in the dark and each of us must learn to turn on his or her own light.
We all walk in the dark and each of us must learn to turn on his or her own light.
We all walk in the dark and each of us must learn to turn on his or her own light.
Nature is so powerful, so strong. Capturing its essence is not easy – your work becomes a dance with light and the weather. It takes you to a place within yourself.
For me, singing sad songs often has a way of healing a situation. It gets the hurt out in the open into the light, out of the darkness.
“Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light for my path.”
There are grander and more sublime landscapes – to me. There are more compelling cultures. But what appeals to me about central Montana is that the combination of landscape and lifestyle is the most compelling I’ve seen on this earth. Small mountain ranges and open prairie, and different weather, different light, all within a 360-degree…
How the visual world appears is important to me. I’m always aware of the light. I’m always aware of what I would call the ‘deep composition.’ Photography in the field is a process of creation, of thought and technique. But ultimately, it’s an act of imaginatively seeing from within yourself.
You can’t study the darkness by flooding it with light.
I have never been able to renounce the light, the pleasure of being, and the freedom in which I grew up.
Truth, like light, blinds. Falsehood, on the contrary, is a beautiful twilight that enhances every object.