Synopses & Reviews
This retrospective of photographs spans a period of forty years. Each photograph, each act of photographing, has been an attempt to stop time, to capture what is happening in the moment, and to preserve the moment for posterity. The photographer frames the subject and gives witness to an order in the universe. But the photographer knows that, as Henri Cartier-Bresson has reminded us, nothing can really bring back the moment of things fixed in the photograph. And nothing can bring back that moment in the life of the photographer. In the wisdom of Buddhism, andldquo;all things are impermanent.andrdquo; Photographs are a reminder of the impermanence of all things. But what the photographer once saw and caught on film may be given another life when others see the photographs. For the photographer, the act of photographing has been an intimate part of the process of living a life. This body of work, accompanied by journal notes, is a record of what the photographer once saw, and is a window to the life once lived.
Synopsis
Capturing a life in photographs--this body of work, accompanied by journal notes, is a record of what the photographer once saw, and is a window to the life once lived.
About the Author
Richard Quinney is the author of several books that combine autobiographical writing and photography, including Journey to a Far Place, For the Time Being, Borderland, and Once Again the Wonder. His other books are in the academic field of sociology. He and his wife live in Madison, Wisconsin and on the family farm in Walworth County.