— REVERIES OF GIVERNY —
At Suwa Shrine pond,
Koi unfurl dreams and legends
In dervish whirls below.
The roots for this series began a few years ago by experimenting with a new technique involving motion.
In this series, the subjects are the denizens of a Shinto shrine pond. There was nothing spectacular about the environment — the kaleidoscope of fall foliage had disappeared and the greys and browns of winter were creeping in. Then I began watching the koi fish, observing their movements, interactions, not only among themselves, but also with me. At that moment, I thought of the Impressionists and wondered if I could make images of these koi as if they were being painted and not photographed.
I started thinking of my camera as a painter’s brush moving over the canvas, sometimes making broad strokes of light, other times dashes of color, using different shutter speeds with different apertures in the same image. The challenge I had set for myself was to make these images “in-camera,” using traditional analog methods for making multiple exposures, as well as slow shutter speeds and reflections, without the wizardry of computer technology.
Each time I returned to the pond I found another interesting aspect to photograph as well as a problem. Resolving the problem became the catalyst for determining the different ways of photographing the koi and the stories I imagined they were telling.