sexta-feira, janeiro 21, 2011

INTERVIEW: "Stephen Shore with Noah Sheldon and Roger White" (2005)[excerto]

«(...)This gets to something that may actually relate more to what we can call pre-visualization. If you go back in photographic literature past Ansel Adams and Minor White to Edward Weston, who gave them those terms, what he describes is something very similar to what in sports coaching is called imaging. And the idea behind it is: I'm a basketball player, and can spend hours a day practicing free throws, and at some point my muscles develop a kind of intelligence. They know the feel of the ball. But there's so many muscles from my feet to the 3 tips of my fingers involved in shooting a free-throw, if I tried to consciously control each of those muscles I couldn't do it. But if I'd spent hours every day practicing so that I'd developed a kind of muscular knowledge, then if I had an image in my mind of the ball going through the hoop, that image will be a coordinating factor, it will coordinate all the muscular decisions. So in photography there's a kind of visual education that's gone on for years, seeing the world and taking a picture as a result. And doing this in different situations over and over again. Your visual muscles become educated and then the mental image you have of the picture will control your formal decisions, and that will create the result.(...)»