Michael Slade
Untitled
Over the past few years I have really started to look less and less at photographers and more at painters. I find that since I really wished that I'd been born with the ability to draw and paint, that I want to photograph things like the painters I admire painted their own subjects. I find a lot of inspiration from their treatment of light and perspective.
With this project on the Great Salt Lake I have been drawing inspiration from a variety of sources...mainly those artists that have come before me. This is specific to this project because I want to see how others have treated the same subject matter. I have found a lot of humor with the painters and drawers in that they are able to create compositions that physically cannot happen.
I have also turned to early and contemporary authors and their treatment of Great Salt Lake. Their writings, descriptions and anecdotes have provided me with immense inspiration and ideas for subjects and areas I would like to try to photograph. I like the idea ultimately of narrating my documentation of the lake with their words. Often I will go out looking for a way to illustrate with a photograph a particular passage or description of the lake and the experiences that they have had.
Another rather unusual source of inspiration for me are maps. I LOVE looking at paper maps of areas I would like to explore further or areas that I have been to repeatedly. The maps give me ideas of views and alternate routes into and out of a location looking for a different angle. I also love looking at historic maps and see how early explorers treated the land and named places. This will also give me ideas about how the first explorers and cartographers thought about the lake.
I just finished reading a book about John Hudson. Hudson was Howard Stansbury's official 'illustrator' during Stansbury's first survey of Great Salt Lake. Hudson's writings and illustrations are a deep source of ideas and inspiration.
Ironically I find that those who have gone before me both visually and with writing in words share many of the same, if not identical impressions and thoughts about the lake that I do.
With this project on the Great Salt Lake I have been drawing inspiration from a variety of sources...mainly those artists that have come before me. This is specific to this project because I want to see how others have treated the same subject matter. I have found a lot of humor with the painters and drawers in that they are able to create compositions that physically cannot happen.
I have also turned to early and contemporary authors and their treatment of Great Salt Lake. Their writings, descriptions and anecdotes have provided me with immense inspiration and ideas for subjects and areas I would like to try to photograph. I like the idea ultimately of narrating my documentation of the lake with their words. Often I will go out looking for a way to illustrate with a photograph a particular passage or description of the lake and the experiences that they have had.
Another rather unusual source of inspiration for me are maps. I LOVE looking at paper maps of areas I would like to explore further or areas that I have been to repeatedly. The maps give me ideas of views and alternate routes into and out of a location looking for a different angle. I also love looking at historic maps and see how early explorers treated the land and named places. This will also give me ideas about how the first explorers and cartographers thought about the lake.
I just finished reading a book about John Hudson. Hudson was Howard Stansbury's official 'illustrator' during Stansbury's first survey of Great Salt Lake. Hudson's writings and illustrations are a deep source of ideas and inspiration.
Ironically I find that those who have gone before me both visually and with writing in words share many of the same, if not identical impressions and thoughts about the lake that I do.