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Bird Photography

Fabric(action)s

· A short history of lace and its depictions in art ·

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This week will be devoted to fabric.  Velvet, cotton, curtains, linen on laundry lines, you’ll be surprised how many interesting facts are associated with stuff we usually ignore. Ignore, that is, until we see it painted and can’t believe how intricate these renderings are, how superbly crafted and deceptively life-like.

As you have guessed, we’ll start with lace. The history is a long one, with mention of it in the old testament, and lacy hairnets found in Egyptian tombs. It took off, though, in the 16th century, first reserved for high ranking clergy, then taking over at the courts of Europe. Some countries exchanged the basic materials for the final product, with Belgium, for example providing finest flax (by now extinct, since fertilization and crossbreeding made the fibers less soft) to France for their centers of lace making. Italy, and in particular Venice, was the cradle of much of the skill, and the court threatened those workers who were lured to France to teach lace-making, with holding their families hostage to the point of execution. (I photographed the handmade lace in Burano, an island of lace makers off the coast of Venice.)  Lace became so desired as a status symbol that it was worth smuggling it across borders (sometimes in loaves of bread, sometimes in coffins where much of the body had been removed to make space) despite the harsh punishments if caught.  There is a lace guild in England which runs a museum in Stourbridge and provides detailed historical information. https://www.laceguild.org/craft/history.html

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The interesting part is of course how artists have rendered this delicate fabric and I will give one example here –  but point you to a terrific collection of artists and their works here http://www.sophieploeg.com/blog/the-10-best-lace-paintings. Her essay with illustrations gives a cross section of paintings across the centuries, with interesting commentary. I chose the Portrait of a Woman, Possibly Maria Trip, Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn, 1639 as my personal favorite, which can now be visited in the Rijksmuseum. It is astonishingly detailed and beautiful.

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Finding a Balance

· experiencing nature vs photographing nature ·

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Shlomo Breznitz, an Israeli psychologist and sometime member of the Knesset, advised me years ago not to take photographs – ever. He was convinced that the focus on capturing the moment would supersede experiencing the moment; he insisted it would narrow memory of the moment to the confines of the photograph and exclude all other contextual information.

There is a kernel of truth in this, although not enough to convince me to give up something that fills my days with joy. Digital photography allows for seamless documentation of your world, since there is no cost attached to taking it all in (that is unless you count the time spent deleting the 90% of pictures that didn’t turn out as a major cost.) However, when you start hunting for a specific subject, as so many of us do who photograph birds, it really changes the way you stroll through the landscape. Rather than enjoying nature as a whole as you would during any old hike, you experience the outing as a success if you got some good shots, and a failure if you didn’t. And then there are the moments where the long sought-after bird appears – there’s the kingfisher! – and you happen to be without camera…

One solution is to go for regular walks without photographic equipment to remind yourself that it is nature that counts, not documentation. Another is to bring only a lens that can be carried rather than requiring a tripod, so you remain mobile.  Another justification is for me the fact that the images bring joy to so many who can not or no longer be out in the fields themselves. In addition, you meet some terrific photographers in the field (Hello, Steve Halpern, Neil Ferguson). And the frequent insight how ignorant I am – barely able to identify the major bird species –  makes for a good reminder to be humble.  That said, today’s photograph is of a hummingbird, taken last spring at the Malheur Wildlife Refuge before the militias sowed their destruction. Happy to learn his exact name!