Book Review - Perception And Imaging: Photography - A Way of Seeing By Richard D. Zakia
Published September 27, 2007
Perception And Imaging: Photography – A Way of Seeing begins with a quote by Henri Cartier-Bresson, "Photography has not changed since is origin except in its technical aspects, which for me are not a major concern." This statement was credited to him in 1978. In the age of the digital image, is this statement still true? According to the author, even today, "Pictures, regardless of how they are created, and recreated, are intended to be looked at." This brings to the foreground, not the technology, but rather the process of seeing.
Perception And Imaging is about the process of visualizing, and how it relates to creating images. In the preface, the author reminds us that the best of the best started out as amateurs. He shows in the book even the great Edward Weston was disappointed back in 1911 when he only won honorable mention with his entry of "Lets Play Hooky" in a photographic contest.
Chapter 1, "Selection" explores how the mind selects the images it sees. There are images we have all seen, in that, where if you look one way, you see a profile of a woman, another way it is the profile of an old mans head. This chapter begins to explain how to we see. Chapter 2, "Gestalt Grouping" examines the use of the gestalt method of how man organizes and groups visual elements so that they are perceived as wholes. That is, how you perceive items as a whole is completely different than how you see them as individual elements.
Chapter 3, "Memory and Association" discusses memory as part of perception problems associated with that. One needs to photograph what they see, not what they know. Chapter 4, "Space, Time, and Color," examine how through space, we find depth, size and texture, through time we find movement, fluctuation and flicker, and through color we find brightness, saturation, and hue. These all add to what we are seeing and how we visualize it.
Chapter 5, "Contours" explains that artists have been using the contrast edges between adjacent areas to bring out contours; or edges, for years. Where the sharp edges occur, a battle for control takes place. This chapter shows how to make use of this battle to control your own images. Chapter 6, "Illusion and Ambiguity" shows how, by using illusion, you can create your own reality, because a well done illusion appears to be real.
- Book Review - Perception And Imaging: Photography - A Way of Seeing By Richard D. Zakia
- Published: September 27, 2007
- Type: Review
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: Arts, Books: Nonfiction, Culture: Photography, Review
- Part of a feature: The Enlightened Image
- Writer: T. Michael Testi
- T. Michael Testi's BC Writer page
- T. Michael Testi's personal site
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