SciAggie
Well-known
About 8 years ago, my morning commute to work was on a freeway that was almost always crowded, with frequent bumper-to-bumper slowdowns. One night a snowstorm had come through. As I was driving to work the next morning, there was 1 other car on my side of the freeway. I thought, "This will make a great picture - no cars on the road!" So, I took a picture through the windshield.
The picture was of a road covered with snow and one car off in the distance. Totally pointless and boring.
I saw the lack of a traffic jam and no cars as something amazing.
The camera did not record that at all.
When I saw your picture of the barren land in Texas, I was reminded of that picture I took. Perhaps you know how this rangeland really should look - but having never seen the land, I don't have a clue, and what I see is just apparently a barren field with a windmill. There's no recorded context of what ought to be there instead.
I saw some 'before' and 'after' pictures of a tropical island that had been stripped clean of trees by a hurricane. The before shot had lots of large trees on a hill. The after shot showed a barren hill. That was impressive, and the context was right there for comparison.
So, that is my critique of your rangeland photo. Hope that it helps.
Yes, that is helpful. It is easy to "miss the forest for all the trees" as the saying goes. I think this thread has value as we share these sorts of experiences and opinions. In a previous post, and as you have alluded, this image is a record of a place but it contains no information to help the viewer see and feel what I was experiencing. That is a very helpful realization for me. Thanks for your input.