Friday, May 15, 2020

Magical Emanations


Magical Emanations

Afternoon Landscape (04.27.20) Akron, Ohio

Afternoon Landscape, Long Lake Channel (05.20.19), Portage Lakes, Ohio

Afternoon Landscape, White Pond Crossing (05.03.20), Akron, Ohio

Afternoon Auto-Landscape, Club 611 (04.27.20), Akron

Afternoon Clouds over Club 611 (07.23.12), Akron

Afternoon Landscape, Copley Community Park (07.27.19), Copley, Ohio


By Tom Wachunas

   “All photographs are memento mori. To take a photograph is to participate in another person’s (or thing’s) mortality, vulnerability, mutability. Precisely by slicing out this moment and freezing it, all photographs testify to time’s relentless melt.” ― Susan Sontag

   “It is an illusion that photos are made with the camera… they are made with the eye, heart and head.” — Henri Cartier-Bresson

   “I can look at a fine art photograph and sometimes I can hear music.” – Ansel Adams


- all the images here are digital infrared photographs -  © Stephen Paternite

   More Spring gleaning, more virtual curating, in the spirit of my post here from May 7. During my Facebook browsing excursions of late, I’ve been admiring a significant number of black-and-white digital photographs by Stephen Paternite. He’s a prolific Akron artist who has been working in infrared photography since 1978. As an evolved photography technique, digital infrared is empowered with a particular sensitivity to light radiations beyond the visible color spectrum. A marvelous tool for seeing the otherwise unseeable.

   Amid the incessant showers of photographs saturating social media, the ubiquity of bright, clamorous color can sometimes feel numbing. In that context, it’s only at first glance that Paternites’s digital infrared black-and-white images might seem like curious incongruities – throwbacks to another era. Yet they’re actually a calming respite from the deafening polychromatic noise of the Internet.

   Look closely. Not at them so much as inside them. You might even hear them - veritable symphonies of dramatic tonal contrasts and exquisite textures. These impeccably composed pictures are spectral landscapes, or dreamscapes, if you will, emanating an immersive, crystalline light that transforms the familiar into something wholly enchanting and otherworldly.

   And it seems to me that beyond being a maker of beautiful photographs, Stephen Paternite is also a poet. Think of his work as optical writing - a wordless, arresting poetry - articulating the luminous persistence of nature’s quiet magic.  

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