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    Lightstream

    €36.00
    Lightstream represents Nigel Grierson's most recent foray into photographic abstraction as he makes long exposures of figures beside the light of the ocean. The beautiful illusory images, propound a spiritual connection between man and nature.
    ISBN: 9781916237315
    AuthorGrierson Nigel
    Pub Date02/10/2020
    BindingHardback
    Pages72
    AvailabilityCurrently out of stock. If available, delivery is usually 5-10 working days.
    Availability: Out of Stock

    Lightstream represents Nigel
    Grierson's most recent foray into photographic abstraction as he makes
    long exposures of figures beside the light of the ocean. Taking the
    maxim from Dieter Appelt "A snapshot steals life that it cannot return. A
    long exposure (creates) a form that never existed", Grierson makes
    beautiful images, which on the surface might appear to owe as much to
    the medium of painting as they do to photography. However, it is
    important to him that these are un-manipulated images straight from the
    camera: "From the outset, my work has been largely about 'photographic
    seeing' as I'm fascinated by what Garry Winogrand so simply described as
    'how something looks when photographed'. Hence, a sense of discovery
    within the work itself is very important to me; finding something new
    that I didn't already know. There's a huge element of 'chance, and the
    embrace of the happy accident within this approach, which is a sort of
    photographic equivalent of action painting. I'm often more interested in
    what something suggests rather than what it actually is, each image
    becoming a starting point for our imagination as it edges towards
    abstraction".


    Yet what is unique about photography is that it
    always keeps something of the original subject. So there's a dynamic
    duality, a dramatic to and fro in the viewer's mind, between what it is
    and what it suggests. The marks and traces created by the moving light,
    at times have a simplicity like a child's drawings. On occasion, the
    residue of a human figure might be reduced to little more than their
    posture or demeanor, which then seems more significant than ever, a sort
    of essence, whether that be elusive or illusive.

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    Lightstream represents Nigel
    Grierson's most recent foray into photographic abstraction as he makes
    long exposures of figures beside the light of the ocean. Taking the
    maxim from Dieter Appelt "A snapshot steals life that it cannot return. A
    long exposure (creates) a form that never existed", Grierson makes
    beautiful images, which on the surface might appear to owe as much to
    the medium of painting as they do to photography. However, it is
    important to him that these are un-manipulated images straight from the
    camera: "From the outset, my work has been largely about 'photographic
    seeing' as I'm fascinated by what Garry Winogrand so simply described as
    'how something looks when photographed'. Hence, a sense of discovery
    within the work itself is very important to me; finding something new
    that I didn't already know. There's a huge element of 'chance, and the
    embrace of the happy accident within this approach, which is a sort of
    photographic equivalent of action painting. I'm often more interested in
    what something suggests rather than what it actually is, each image
    becoming a starting point for our imagination as it edges towards
    abstraction".


    Yet what is unique about photography is that it
    always keeps something of the original subject. So there's a dynamic
    duality, a dramatic to and fro in the viewer's mind, between what it is
    and what it suggests. The marks and traces created by the moving light,
    at times have a simplicity like a child's drawings. On occasion, the
    residue of a human figure might be reduced to little more than their
    posture or demeanor, which then seems more significant than ever, a sort
    of essence, whether that be elusive or illusive.