Fence & Grass, Canmore AB
Leon StrembitskyFrom 2003 to 2006 my wife Colleen and I ran a photo workshop each summer in Canmore AB. We’d rent a condo we had access to that had lots of bedrooms, and Colleen would cook gourmet meals while I took participants out to various locations around Canmore. During the evenings I’d do portfolio reviews of work that everyone brought with them. These were very much hands-on workshops, in that I’d take my photo gear along with me each day and photograph right along with the participants. I felt it was useful to have them see how I approached a scene, and many of them would ask questions and even have a look through my camera to get a feel of what I was seeing at the time. This photograph of a fence and grass was taken, as I recall, just after a lunch break and everyone was gathered around getting their gear together to carry on for the day.
Information
-
Media
photography -
Subject
Bring it Home -
Artwork Type
photography -
Dimensions (framed)
23" x 20"
Cost
Leon Strembitsky
My first love is black and white photography. That probably has to do with the fact that I started out many years ago sloshing around in a makeshift darkroom set up in my parent's basement bathroom. In the last few years I’ve transitioned from shooting large format film, almost exclusively black and white, to a digital slr which allows me to produce colour as well. Regardless, whether the final image will be black and white or colour, I'm always drawn to scenes with strong compositional elements and strong lighting. Most of my images are manipulated and often times quite different from what a literal translation of the scene would show. I do, however, strive to maintain the believability of the image. So, even though there may be a great deal of manipulation, it isn't readily obvious.
People often ask me why I photograph and after much consideration the one thing that I come up with is this...it gives me joy. To find exciting things all around, sometimes in the most familiar places, fascinates me. Showing it to others is my way of sharing that joy. That's all there is to it, no drawn out explanations, no spiritual intervention, no existential undercurrents, just good, strong photographs! After all, when I'm not here to explain it, there will only be the work so it has to be able to stand on its own.