Is social media making us unsocial?

We’ve spoken a lot here about social media and whether it is making us more or less social, more or less connected.  And you know that I come down pretty squarely on the side of more connected.

So picture this, you’re on say the Metro North commuting into New York City.  Everyone on the train is glued to their cell phones: talking, texting, searching the web.  Antisocial?  TIME WARP!! (I know not that again!). Now project yourself back to 1963 on the same train.  Picture what you are doing.  Actually, you don’t need to picture it because there is a wonderful picture circulating on the web, which pretty much answers the question. 

The antithesis of cute and cuddly?

Apparently each year conservationist in Frankfurt, Germany get together to count the bats in the basement vaults of an old brewery.  They started in 1987 when they found 150 bats.  This year there were 1,800. I’m going to offer up today this excellent photograph by Patrick Pleul/dpa/Zuma Press showing conservationist holding a greater mouse-eared bat from the count on January 17.

One is tempted to count this the antithesis of cute and cuddly.  But I don’t know.  I used to look at the bats hibernating in the expansion cracks of the physics building at Cornell.  They looked pretty cute and cuddly, and they are glorious to watch flying at night.  Indeed, how would you like to make your living catching flying insects in the dark.

Two things come to mind.  First, a numebr of years ago Harold Edgerton visited my laboratory at the Worcester Foundation for Experimental Biology.  He showed some pretty spectacular of bats captured in the act of catching meal worms sling shot into the air. There was a man who knew how to enjoy science.  And second, of course, is the thought of Count von Count joing the Frankfurt bat counting team:

Eine Fledermaus, zwei Fledermäuse, drei Fledermäuse…”

Giving in to Bao Bao

It has been suggested, by a certain psychologist reader and friend, that I am not coming clean on this cute cuddly animal thing.  And I have come to believe that it might indeed be good for my mental health to admit that, like everyone else, I am a sucker for a good cute cuddly animal picture (CCAP).  Last week the Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington, DC introduced their five month old panda cub, Bao Bao, and, well what can I say, it’s a baby panda and the only thing cuter than a panda bear is a baby panda bear.  Friends, I cannot resist a panda bear and, yes, I will rush to the National Zoo as soon as I can.

And while I’m confessing to this foible, I need also to admit a love of everything sea otter and everything cat.  I am an ailurophile through and through.  I have learned a lot from my cat.  As our old friend Mark Twain pointed out about cats as teachers:

“A man who carries a cat by the tail learns something he can learn in no other way.”
But I digress.  As for Bao Bao and his kin pandas, many years ago Disney did a study of what features in a face define cuteness and elicit a giant:
AWWW!
 The panda bear is quintessentially cuteness personified.  Did I mention that Bao Bao means “precious” or “treasure’ in Mandarin?
We have spoken in this blog about a lot of great photographs of terrible events.  So it feels good to speak about something wonderful.  In the end that is the very point about CCAPs.  They make us happy, and no one can say that making people happy is any less a noble purpose of a photograph than making them sad.
All right, all right!  Do I get to post a picture of a baby panda now?  I included a link above showing five month old Bao Bao’s debut.  Figure 1 is an image from the Wikipedia by Colegota showing a one week old Panda in 2005 at the Chengdu’s Giant Panda Breeding Research Base in China.  What more can I say but
AWWW!
Figure 1 - 1 week old giant panda cub.  Image from the Wikipedia by Colegota and in the public domain under common attribution license.

Figure 1 – 1 week old giant panda cub at Chendu’s Giant Panda Breeding Research Base in China . Image from the Wikipedia by Colegota and in the public domain under common attribution license.

 

In the decisive moment – and one way of dealing with the cold

Figure 1 - A decisive moment on the beach in La Paloma, Rocha, Uruguary. (c) L Algorta and used with permission.

Figure 1 – A decisive moment on the beach in La Paloma, Rocha, Uruguary. (c) L Algorta 2014 and used with permission.

As I have mentioned a few times, it has been mighty cold here in the Northeast.  There are many ways to deal with this.  You can be like Mr. Zakowski of yesterday’s post and go out and deal with it, taking beautiful photographs.  You can be like me and stay indoors as much as possible.  Bring on the macrophotography!  My friend and Hati and Skoll reader, Lucia, has been even more creative.  She went to visit family in Uruguay, which is to say that she chose summer over winter.  Smart girl!

About a week ago Lucia sent me the wonderful picture of Figure 1.  It was taken with her cell phone on the beach at La Paloma, Rocha, Uruguary just as a storm broke and then sun came out. Amazing!   It is the light of what Henri Cartier-Bresson (1908-2004) called a perfect “decisive moment.”  It doesn’t last.  You just have to take the picture.

In had that experience once on a bridge in Amsterdam, NL.  It is also, of course, the experience of Ansel Adams when he took “Moonrise, Hernandez, NM, 1941.”The result of my decisive Amsterdam moment is this image.  What I learned from that experience was that the process needs to be three-fold.  First have your camera ready and preset for the light.  That’s gotten a lot easier with all the auto features on modern cameras. But I still do it, because the light defines whether a picture is going to be possible. Second take the picture, just take it! Third, you can start to fuss with the compensation and exposure if the light remains long enough.

Back to Lucia’s picture.  There I was shivering at my desk on a rather gloomy and chilly morning.  What a treat to know that somewhere it was summer!

Frozen light house of Lake Michigan images by Thomas Zakowski.

Oh brrr!  It has been really cold here in the Northeast, so much so that I am wont to venture outside too much to take photographs.  Am missing a lot I know.  But when I look out at the Charles River frozen shore to shore in Watertown, I feel for the Canadian geese.

Well shame on me, a friend has brought to my attention a fabulous portfolio of pictures of lighthouses on Lake Michigan encased in ice.  Not just ice, but magical ice with wind twisted icicles.  This portfolio by Thomas Zakowski is spectacular and conjures up thoughts of the impending Fimbuvlter, when the wolf Skoll shall devour the sun and his brother Hati , the moon and the world will know no light. Mr. Zakowski is not afraid to venture out into the cold.

Enjoying his magical images by a warm fire while sipping hot chocolate sounds like an excellent way to spend a cold winter’s day.

The age of the drone comes to photography

Figure 1 - A photo drone positioned beside the moon.  Image from the Wikimedia Commons by Don McCullough and put into the public domain under creative commons attribution license.

Figure 1 – A photo drone positioned beside the moon. Image from the Wikimedia Commons by Don McCullough and put into the public domain under creative commons attribution license.

The Christmas holiday this year brought the news that Amazon was experimenting with drone delivery of packages.  While the big issue is bound to be safety to pedestrians, the age of the drone is coming and along with it the real possibility that you will be able to click the little “30 minute delivery” icon with your computer mouse and a half an hour later your package is delivered by one of Amazon’s “Octocopters.”

Some of the implications of this are, well, kind of chilling.  Technical advantage is fleeting and there  are lots of people out there with pretty nefarious motives.  So how this all plays out in terms of governmental control is going to be interesting to say the least.

Still from a amateur, or even professional, photographer’s perspective here is a whole new tool for photography and a whole new perspective on the world as well.  We have all seen the little helicopters being sold at the malls.  They go for about $30 and are good for scaring animals and breaking fragile things around the house.  One of the sights that amused me this past fall as I walked around the mall was a drone hot air balloon in the shape of a shark.  Children gathered on the second floor and giggled gleefully as this misplaced predator was guided from the ground floor tauntingly close to out stretched arms.

But there are some new products out there selling for about the price of a good digital camera that enable you to fly a camera around the neighborhood, hovering over trees, or you neighbor’s swimming pool.  Nude sunbathers beware!  Figure 1 shows a picture of one of these taken by California photographer Don McCullough.  He asked the operator to move it in position with the moon.

For those of you interested in exploring this technology further, a review of the latest version of this technology, the Phantom 2 Vision Photo Drone from DJI can be found in the NY Times.  This retails for about $1200.  The conclusion there is that it’s not a toy, or at least that it’s a toy for big boys and girls.  Also the camera suffers from  wide angle pin cushioning.  But maybe that’s the effect that you’re looking for as you zoom about the landscape.

Seriously though, what we are probably witnessing is the early stages of a whole new perspective for photographers.  You will no longer be limited by where you can carry your camera.  The sky’s the limit!

Follow-up on “Follow me”

Last March I posted about Murad Osmann and his Instagram sensation “Follow-me.”  Osmann has taken a truly rare perspective, focusing on the back of his girlfriend Nataly Zakharova as she leads him all around the world.  Each picture is shot from the photographer, or observer’s viewpoint, and you see Nataly’s hand as she reaches back and leads Osmann onto adventure in some dramatic world. He takes these pictures either with his IPhone or with his DSLR and then uses Camera+ software for processing.

Well, throughout the year this photoseries and mystery has gone viral, as they say.  There are thousands of fans following Murad and Nataly on their journeys.  But Nataly never turns her face.  That is until now, when she turned it for NBC’s “Today Show.”  Murad’s muse is finally revealed.  Both Murad and the newly revealed Nataly both informed us, they do it for love.

One more tilt of the hat for the New Year

I know that I should be giving up on the New Year by this point.  It’s old news and time to move on.  Still I found myself this past weekend checking out BBC News’ “Best Reader Photographs of 2013.”  So I am hoping that you will excuse me one more trip down the memory lane that was 2013.

One of the nice things about that BBC is that they feature readers’ photos.  So it’s not just about professional photographers from this and that news agency.  I was amazed at how many pictures from this past year’s BBC series I loved, that is even if i exclude the cute cuddly animal photos.

My top like from BBC 2013 is Samina Farooq’s “Puzzles and Riddles.”  I like the dramatic colors, the gesture of the hands, the enigmatic numbers on the fingers, and the black background.  It all brings new life to the Rubick’s Cube.

Then there is the wonderful photo by Manisha on the theme of “Hands.” This is a very well done and excellently composed example of perspective shift and ambiguity.  The transfer from the two size reference frames is seemless.  And I think that the floor tiles and the stairs really add to the drama of the photograph.  Placing them diagonally in the image adds a very dramatic effect that I do not believe would be there if they were pependicular or parallel to the image.  The complement the theme.

Next there is Alan Walker’s “Just a pink hat on a sunny day – to take your mind off winter.”  Frankly, I really need this about now!  It is truly freezing here.  I just love the way that the lip gloss matches the hat and the little sparkles of sunlight on the woman’s face.

I’d like to also mention the Zara Sumpton’s “A frame within a frame A self portrait taken with a disposable camera in the jungle, Ecuador.”   A hypocrite would also mention the kitten peering over the edge of a table in N Sishat’s “My kitten Prof. Piddles eavesdropping on a private conversation between my husband and me.” But, of course, I will not!

The passing of Life photographer John Dominis

My town dump is big on recycling, and one of the  features there is a little unheated shed, where people share books.  It’s my favorite book store, the books are old and the price (free) is right! A couple of weeks ago I found a 1957 book entitled LIFE photographers, Their Careers and Favorite Pictures.  I took it home and it was sitting on a shelf unopened and unread until a few days ago, when I received an email from a reader alerting me to the passing of one of the great Life Magazine photographers, John Dominis.  Dominis died in New York City on Monday, December 30 at the age of 92.  I immediately went to the almost forgotten book and looked him up curious to see what were his favorite own photographs in 1957.  It was needless-to-say a half baked story.

Dominis has been praised for his ability to masterly photograph anything, and his career spanned the Korean and Vietnam Wars as well as the turbulent sixties and seventies.  So in 1957 his career was just beginning, and some of his most iconic images – the ones burned into our collective consciousness were ahead of him.

Many believe that his greatest image was his 1965 photograph showing Mickey Mantle tossing his helmet in disgust after a terrible at-bat.  This is one of those pictures that tells the whole story without words.  It is a most eloquent pictures of a great athlete in decline.  And remember that in the late fifties early sixties Mickey was one of the true greats. In 1961 there was a heroic battle between Mantle and Roger Maris to be the first to beat Babe Ruth’s home run record by hitting 61 homers in a single season.  I was at Yankee stadium when Maris succeeded.

For me personally however, his greatest image, the one the still brings shivers to me was this picture of defiant atheletes Tommie Smith and John Carlos on the awards pedestal at the 1968 Olympics.  This is one of the great defining moment images.  It contains in a single photograph all of the ambiguity of 1968.

So with the New Year we may reflect on the loss of a truly great photographer and at the same time we may reflect on an opus that truly helped define the second half of the twentieth century.