chagalov:

Ruth Bernhard, nd -by Steven J. Gelberg
yama-bato:

Steven Gelberg: Ruth Bernhard
The great photographer Ruth Bernhard, 1905-2006
Year: 1998
“For me, the pleasure of photography is in the pleasure of seeing, the  experience of opening a more intuitive, patient, contemplative eye to  the world. It’s about flowing with the strange, synergistic relationship  between quiet receptivity and probing curiosity. It is about  appreciating the “suchness” of things, as well as intuiting their  symbolic resonances. Photography is, for me, the cultivation of a deeper  seeing, and through deeper seeing, heightened awareness and emotion. It  is about being surprised and delighted by the “ten thousand things” (as  the Taoists say) of the world, and cultivating a sense of wonder. It is  both a spiritual discipline and a hedonistic surrender to the senses.  It’s about paying homage to the perceived object itself, and to the  process of perception itself—allowing oneself to luxuriate in the  visual pleasures of form, shape, line, texture, light and shadow.”

chagalov:

Ruth Bernhard, nd -by Steven J. Gelberg

yama-bato:

Steven Gelberg: Ruth Bernhard

The great photographer Ruth Bernhard, 1905-2006

Year: 1998

“For me, the pleasure of photography is in the pleasure of seeing, the experience of opening a more intuitive, patient, contemplative eye to the world. It’s about flowing with the strange, synergistic relationship between quiet receptivity and probing curiosity. It is about appreciating the “suchness” of things, as well as intuiting their symbolic resonances. Photography is, for me, the cultivation of a deeper seeing, and through deeper seeing, heightened awareness and emotion. It is about being surprised and delighted by the “ten thousand things” (as the Taoists say) of the world, and cultivating a sense of wonder. It is both a spiritual discipline and a hedonistic surrender to the senses. It’s about paying homage to the perceived object itself, and to the process of perception itself—allowing oneself to luxuriate in the visual pleasures of form, shape, line, texture, light and shadow.”

(via unnaturalist)