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Contemporary photographer Steven Meckler and Chinese philosopher Chuang-Tzu share a perspective on creative work: the seamless flow between the artist, the art, and the world. This perspective is elaborated in The Tao of Photography: Seeing Without Seeing, by Philippe Gross and S.I. Shapiro, which outlines the Taoistic approach to photography with emphasis on letting go of expectations and seeing the world with a fresh eye.
A couple of unrelated bits of information can come together sometimes to create an insight that's greater than the sum of its parts.
This week for Examiner I interviewed Steven Meckler, a commercial photographer in Tucson, Arizona who lives and works in a huge studio in the Fourth Avenue arts district south of Downtown. He's a witty, engaging interview who speaks candidly about what he sees as the relationship between art and work. He says he was apprenticed to an artist in New York who lived in his studio, and when he came to Tucson he wanted to do the same -- "to live the career." In addition to his creative work, he's also deeply involved in education, teaching digital photography and working to create scholarships and opportunities for art and design students in local art programs. "Photography is about the doing," he said, and it's that seamless integration of art and life that seems to direct his work.
Image Source: http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/ display.pperl?isbn=9781580081948Used only with express written permission
I also picked up a book I've read and re-read numerous times since returning (or should I say "coming home"?) to photography -- The Tao of Photography: Seeing Beyond Seeingby Philippe Gross and S. I. Shapiro. This book, like numerous others relating Eastern philosophies to the arts, discusses the importance of flow and oneness in creating art, in this case, specifically photography. Gross and Shapiro illustrate their points using examples of street photography and the urban landscape, referring numerous times to that master of street phography, Henri Cartier-Bresson, and to the Tao as expressed by the Chinese philosopher Chuang-Tzu.
Gross and Shapiro point out that the best work is achieved by abandoning goals, that the way of the Tao is the way of discovery. They discuss Chuang-Tzu's teachings in light of what we are told are the "rules" of photography and point out that these very rules create rigidity and block true seeing. A key to breaking those rules is the distinction made by Chuang-Tzu between Great Understanding and Little Understanding -- between seeing the larger picture of unity and focusing on the small, limited world of the day to day.
Steve Meckler lives in the world of the Greater Understanding -- the work, the life, the worldview, are all integrated in a way that is enriching and creates flow between his photography and the community he shares with so many other artists. And while we can't all live in our studios, we can certainly live our art and, as Chuang-Tzu advises, "leap into the boundless and make it our home."
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