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Excerpts
from..
The Hamilton Spectator
Burlington Wednesday, April 26, 2000
Photos serve as mirrors or windows
Elaine Hujer
Special To The Hamilton Spectator
The Latow Photographers' Guild Juried Exhibition
this year, now on view at the Burlington Art Centre,
calls to mind a very famous book by critic and photographer
John Szarkowksi.
The book is called Mirrors and Windows and Szarkowski's
thesis, much simplified, goes like this: Mirrors
are photographs which are aligned with the romantic
tradition, the view that the meanings of the world
are dependent on our own personal subjective understandings.
As Szarkowksi says, in images that are mirrors,
"the field mouse, the skylark, the sky itself
do not earn their meaning out of their own evolutionary
history, but are meaningful in terms of the anthropocentric
metaphors we assign to them."
Windows, on the other hand, are photographs that
describe the world independently of any human associations.
A photographer creating windows believes that the
world itself contains discoverable patterns of intrinsic
meaning and that it is the role of the artist-photographer
to discern these patterns and make them obvious
to others through his art.
Essentially, then, mirrors tell us more about the
artist and windows, more about the world.
The two photographs that received Honourable Mentions,
seem to belong in the mirror category. Karen Schreiber's
Flower Rainbow is a giclee print, a vivid chromatic
fantasy that suggests a flower garden seen through
a kaleidoscope. Schreiber says that she combined
multiple exposures along with a new printing technology
using watercolour ink jet spray to achieve the impressionistic
results. The giclee, or ink jet spray, allowed her
to blow up her photographic colour print into a
much larger size than was possible with older technology.
And by using photography, instead of painting for
this image, Schreiber underlines that fact that
photography is not just a medium of representation,
but rather, like painting, a medium of the imagination.
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