"foundation studies"
shudders at the flashbacks
They always seem to put one through the hoop jumping foundation of exposure to everything. Photography was my focus until I met sculpture and was immediately addicted to 3D. It's funny for me to come full circle back to doing photography for itself, rather than using it to document, show, and market sculpture, which will always be my addiction.
by displacing waves of air and photons in a controlled environment, I was sculpting with the room itself as the material, and as people moved through it and saw (and heard) the (intentional) manipulations of space that they themselves were "part" of the sculpture.
Brilliant complex concept. I am entranced reading your description of this. Thank you for sharing this.
Pretty cool that you got to work with glass. Glass and I have never been friends. It likes to hurt me and I like to break it. Aside from that, I love seeing work created by others.
I made it up on the fly as I was typing. 5 years of art school makes one good at waffling. Unfortunately, it doesn't provide a suitable amount of waffles to consume on a daily basis.
Out of context, this is an amazing sentence
Best way to wing it word flies.
I don't think it's intended to provide such sustance. Waffles make me think of maple syrup, that delicious liquid dark gold.
Now how does that figure? I'm wondering what visual images that brought forth.
The mysteries of my mind lie beyond locked gates. I have a dark sense of humour. I apply phrases inappropriately to the context in which they could be used.
I see. Dark sense of humour meet twisted sense of humour.
This sounds like a lot of fun. I read the creativity in that also. I like that. I'm kind of smirking at thoughts I'm having but not sharing right in this moment as I censor my fingerlips.
Just read Douglas Adams for an idea of how I think and write in my own head.
Outrageous metaphors are common, like giraffes at a child's indoor playground.
Ahh, well, I have read Douglas Adams already. I like the vision, lol.
What's your take on Haruki Murakami? A little different direction than Adams but not dissimilar if looked at from a certain perspective, albeit more apparent in a few particular books of Murakami's.
bursts out laughing at the image
I see where you're going with this. I like that. Very amusing.
Haven't read any.
My next books are collections of short stories by Ted Chiang. His short story was behind the film Arrival, which I recently rewatched, and adored.