What do these pictures have in common (apart from having been taken in various places in Japan)? No, they don’t have the same look and feel, composition or use of light, nor they convey a particular meaning. What they have in common is that they’re just dull and boring —meaningless, indeed.
This picture of the Yokohama’s Chinatown Dragon is hardly different than the others available on the Internet.
It shares a similar fate with this one, taken last Mid November in Osaka,
and, as Google Lens mercylessly shows, with this one, shot in Omura, near Nagasaki.
One can hardly say that this is a never-seen-before view of Tokyo’s Kyu-Shiba-rikyū Gardens,
or of the Seiko Tower and Mitsukoshi in Ginza
Well, I am sure that you got the point.
Now, let’s look at a few pictures I casually took in Rome. This one was taken during a high-security alert when the army was deployed to protect access to the Holy See.
In this case, unlike the Japanese pictures, Google Lens found similar photos, but none that were almost identical to mine. The picture focuses on the fence, the military vehicle and the two combat-ready soldiers, with the blurred S. Peter’s Basilica in the background. This sends a clear message that the area is off-limits.
This one, which was taken in an antique restorer workshop via Collina, near Piazza Fiume is another example of a more meaningful photo. The master restorer is in stark contrast to the frenzied pace of the neighbourhood, taking his time to do his work. The calm, beautiful dog sleeping at the front door adds a peaceful touch to the otherwise hectic town.
Regardless of the likeliness of the photos, the crucial difference between the two sets is that in the case of those taken in Japan I was a cultural stranger to the Country, while in the case of the Italian one I was in my backyard. In other words, I ‘knew’ what I was looking at.
I’m a big supporter of Bergson’s quote, ‘The eye sees what the mind is prepared to comprehend’. I’m not sure who first said it, but what matters is the message. I believe that being able to ‘see’ a photo requires what I call ‘belonging’ — to a place, to a group, to a culture. This is what makes the difference between a soulless stock photo-like picture and images that (want to) have meaning.
Not ‘belonging’ seriously hinders the possibility of taking meaningful pictures. Of course, by chance or because of a spray-and-pray shooting style is entirely possibile to get decent and also superbe shots. But the difference is in the capability of foreseing the results, rahter than discovering them back home, browsing through the memory card.
This is why one should only shoot in his own backyard: because the backyard is the only place where, by belonging, one can understand the meaning of what the eye sees. Or, to put it another way, if you make the world your backyard, you’ll be able to take pictures that are a true reflection of your vision, culture and aesthetics whenever you are.
I’m not that interested in gear, lenses and cameras anymore —I shoot with what comes at hand— however, for anyone who are, the pictures in Japan where taken with a Fuji X-T5 and a Fujnon XF 10-24/4, the one at the Holy See with a Fuji X-T3 and a Viltrox AF 56/1,4 XF, while the one taken at the restorer’s workshop was taken with a Leica M9 and a Zeiss ZM Biogon 35/2,8.
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John Fontana on Why You Should Only Shoot in Your Backyard (or ‘The Art of Belonging’)
Comment posted: 16/12/2024
Geoff Chaplin on Why You Should Only Shoot in Your Backyard (or ‘The Art of Belonging’)
Comment posted: 16/12/2024
You're absolute right if you have a camera in your hand take meaningful pictures.
CHRISTOF RAMPITSCH on Why You Should Only Shoot in Your Backyard (or ‘The Art of Belonging’)
Comment posted: 16/12/2024
Tony Warren on Why You Should Only Shoot in Your Backyard (or ‘The Art of Belonging’)
Comment posted: 16/12/2024
Comment posted: 16/12/2024
David Dutchison on Why You Should Only Shoot in Your Backyard (or ‘The Art of Belonging’)
Comment posted: 16/12/2024
Daniel Emerson on Why You Should Only Shoot in Your Backyard (or ‘The Art of Belonging’)
Comment posted: 16/12/2024
I disagree. I think that there is a commonality of humanity and the larger bio/physical world that expressed across the planet and using your local knowledge can assist the photographer in seeking to find the expression of themes elsewhere.
However, having said that, I think that your thesis has merit in making us evaluate what we do: to learn from our locality and leverage that knowledge elsewhere to enhance our receptivity to otherwise latent photographic opportunities. I think that this is a process that we use in all spheres of life.
In retrospect, motivated by your comments, I recall how I bristle with excitement while driving across the bridge leading to my early home, and find an enhanced motivation to stop and photograph some everyday object that has new meaning relating to a past and lost era dear to my heart. Thus, I agree with your statement of the power of the local area.
How do we export that to other areas?
You issued a challenge that made me think. Nice work Andrea!!
Regards Daniel
Comment posted: 16/12/2024
Vu on Why You Should Only Shoot in Your Backyard (or ‘The Art of Belonging’)
Comment posted: 17/12/2024
if you wanted the picture to speak for itself, composition would have helped. composition matters. in the absence of a self-narrative composition, a caption with words brings some meaning to the picture. it is the photographer who provides context and story that makes a picture interesting to a stranger. do that with light, do that with composition or do that with words or...
none of this has anything to do with where - in your back yard, front yard or remote frontier - a photo is made.
Comment posted: 17/12/2024
Jeffery Luhn on Why You Should Only Shoot in Your Backyard (or ‘The Art of Belonging’)
Comment posted: 18/12/2024
If you changed the wording in the title of your article so it read "Should you only shoot in your backyard?" It would have have made more sense to me. But, as you've written it, it was still thought provoking. I got two good points from it:
1- Go beyond the common shots that have been done hundreds of times.
2- Take a fresh look at your own backyard because if you try hard, there are photo opportunities you can still find.
I live in a rural part of California that's mostly cattle and vineyards. I've never been a great landscape photographer, and even though I can be in Yosemite in 90 minutes, I've never taken a spectacular photo there. Every time I set up, the camera shows me a view that I've seen in dozens of photos. So, I take photos of people, because nobody has ever, or will ever, take the same shot as me. If I'm going to take a shot of Half Dome, or El Capitan, or Yosemite Falls, I put a principle person in that shot. IMHO, it makes it different.
With that said, I think that leaving your backyard is inspirational. I do my best work in places I'm seeing for the first time. I may be taking a similar shot as hundreds have done before me, but the scene is new to me...and I make sure I have lots of close-ups of locals. That's what makes an overdone scene different.
Your points are well taken and have churned up some interesting responses.
Comment posted: 18/12/2024