“How to Build a Home” is a beautiful piece done by The
Cinematic Orchestra featuring Patrick Watson. I recently discovered this piece
on my return to Utah and its wintry tundra. The climate change was quite a
contrast from my home in sunny South Florida and so thus my mind has been
impressed upon the emotions evoked within me from the winter climate
surrounding me. The photos I have taken represent to me the feelings connected
to the Utah landscape and the subtle emotions within the music. My central
point is that while my youth in South Florida has shaped who I am as a person,
I have begun to build a home in the vastly different Utah. As my time in Utah
has progressed, I have developed an affinity with its scenery and cultural
landscape. I have begun to “Build a Home” during my time here serving on my
mission and attending BYU.
I tried to use several visualization techniques such as
color, shape, line, tone, and depth. To begin, I shall speak about the color I
used in my photos for this assignment. Much of the color in the photos is
either completely saturated with a blue hue to the photograph, or has
contrasting elements of orange and blues. Although blue is an inherently cool
color, the more I used it in my photography of these beautiful landscapes, the
more I had hoped to create an affinity between blue and the concept of beauty.
Some of the photos have strong orange color within them. These photos were
taken at places that I associate with feelings of warmth and love. The first
photo with the orange saturation was taken at my work, where I have made
friends and found a sustainable means of providing for myself. The second photo
with the strong orange color was taken outside my apartment complex, a place
where I have literally built a home and developed strong connections with
friends, new and old.
There are some photos that have strong contrast in tone, particularly
of the ‘skeleton’-esque trees. I find that these tonal differences paint the
aspect of the strings used within the musical piece. They also tie into the
monochromatic themes espoused within the music and my feelings towards the
harsh winter climate. It’s a strange feeling to recognize that Florida is no
longer my home, and that I have begun to build a home here in Utah. I’m not
quite sure that I am completely happy with this new revelation, hence the
contrast of tone.
The depth is a manifestation of my introspective self during
the Winter season. I often find myself peeking inside my soul, questioning the
world around me, and am generally a bit more introverted. The cold seems to
have this effect on my Spirit and pushes me each day to ask myself difficult,
yet necessary, questions. Perhaps it’s due to where I’m at in my life currently
as an aspiring artist, but I find that this musical piece is symbolic of the
depth I constantly seeking.
The shot of my feet and the camera strap is simply a nod to
Agnes Varda and her deeply emotional narrative style of filmmaking. I also
tried to use shape in my images that contextualize the shape and movement that
the musical piece evokes. Whether in bokeh, shape of image, or eye-line I feel
these are visual representations of the minor tone of the musical piece.
I would hope that one could tie the themes espoused within
the music and the photos but understand that it may be a stretch. The musical piece
is imbued with emotional chords played through piano and strings slowly
building towards a climax. I would freely admit that my pictures may not best
capture that climax. However, I feel that the subtle colors, shapes, and tones
of the images represent a slow emotional climax that I feel occurring within
myself.
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