Ngong Ping Cable Car I

This is the first of 4 posts on Ngong Ping, taken with my Canon G11.

IMG_6991 640

As mentioned here and here, the Canon G11 is my default family snapshot camera plus street photography tool when I’m playing the role of the wholesome family guy as opposed to a street photography maniac outside of my professorial hours.

When will it break?, I sometimes wonder at quiet moments, as I need an excuse to get that fabulous Ricoh GR.

As I tell my wife, it’s all for the sake of documenting our important family moments, of course.

IMG_6995 640

If you’re a poet and nothing else, then you’re not a good poet.

If you’re a street photographer and nothing else, then you can’t possibly be a good street photographer.

If you’re a scholar and nothing else … (you get my point)

So yes, I’m a father and husband too, and I can play the role of a tourist very well.

Ngong Ping is one of those tourist sites that is tastefully done, I think.

It’s a tasteful blend of commerce and spirituality.

IMG_7009 640

IMG_7011 640

So yes, I was in B mode (berserk mode) with my camera in the cable car.

IMG_7019 640

IMG_7042 640

IMG_7051 640

I can’t decide which of the above three photographs is the best.

I feel like I’m comparing apples with oranges.

It’s never the same river, I’m not the same me from one moment to the next, and strictly speaking even cameras of the same model are not the same.

You get the picture *drum roll, with crashing cymbals* (yes, pun intended).

Which is why I have 2 Yashica GX’s, 2 Contax TVS’s and am planning for another lens for my Leica M6.

Don’t tell my wife. (I was joking about the planning bit.)

I often go shopping with the intention of not buying another film camera.

Anyway, back to the main plot – it was raining so the view was rather poetic…

IMG_7068 640

IMG_7070 640

IMG_7109 640

So – a quiz. Are the above three Buddhas or one?

I’ll just end with this quote from one of my favorite books. I read it once every few years.

I mean the book.

The only Zen you find on the tops of mountains is the Zen you bring up there.

(Robert M. Pirsig, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance)

ROBERT M. PIRSIG, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance

Read more at http://www.notable-quotes.com/p/pirsig_robert_m.html#qY3ZCqf1wh3GR32J.

Tranquillity

We all need to walk.

I have done this walk so many times now, that some of these images are lodged in my mind.

We all know how our external environments organize our internal state.

In a crowded shopping mall, we’re all a bit tense.

Look at water and we relax.

IMG_20140415_0036 640

We all need a depository of homely images in our mind.

IMG_20140415_0026 640

So we feel at home even outside of home.

IMG_20140415_0027 640

There’s a story of a family here waiting to be told.

IMG_20140415_0028 640

Just a little narrative.

IMG_20140415_0030 640

A little space.

IMG_20140415_0031 640

A scattering of things telling us who we are.

IMG_20140415_0034 640

Just a little window to the world. A little insight.

IMG_20140415_0037 640

A safe harbor.

IMG_20140415_0024 640

And we’re home.

 

 

Noah’s Ark in Hong Kong (Monochrome Version)

We’re still at Noah’s Ark.

IMG_6946 640

Though this time, in contrast to my previous post, I figure I’ll go the monochrome high contrast way just to see the difference.

Did I mention there was a beach next to Noah’s Ark?

IMG_6743 640 1

So we have a couple posing for wedding photographs, quite oblivious to the sun-bather who is enjoying the view.

IMG_6881 640

The humor is gone from the photograph… instead it’s a kind of existential commentary on human aspiration…

IMG_6888 640

A reflection on the ups and downs of everyday life…

IMG_6862 640

For some reason the same photograph in high contrast monochrome looks grittier …

IMG_6855 640

There’s plenty to keep the kids busy. Educational too.

IMG_6841 640

The Last Supper.

IMG_6838 640

The Last Supper, with the kids in front and gallery guide behind.

IMG_6898 640

The giraffe looks overextended.

IMG_6949 640

Park attendants sorting things out.

IMG_6957 640

From behind a popcorn and bbq stand.

IMG_6793 640

The village house is still beautiful.

IMG_6959 640

Time to relax.

Thanks for reading!

 

Stories and Things

We can’t help but tell stories.

There’s a story to be told here about directions, linearity and tension.

IMG_20140320_0012 640

And here about the value we give to things.

IMG_20140320_0022 640

Here, we see possibilities…

IMG_20140320_0025 640

And here, we read.

IMG_20140320_0027 640

Is this an image of ourselves, caught living in our own fish tanks?

IMG_20140320_0031 640

Is this where we go in the end?

IMG_20140320_0032 640

Or is there someone upstairs, waiting for us?

IMG_20140320_0044 640

 

Appetites, Things, Phantasmagoria

I was just looking through a few images taken on an evening at Fa Yuen Street and on an afternoon in the vicinity of Shamshuipo.

There is that contrast that plays with visibility and lack thereof.

IMG_20140320_0056 640

We see people emerging from darkness.

IMG_20140320_0064 640

We see hands and appetites but not always faces.

IMG_20140320_0066 640

We are reduced to silhouettes of ourselves.

What defines and frames our activities are appetites and things…

IMG_20140320_0029 640

IMG_20140320_0076 640

IMG_20140320_0016 640

Our appetites and things have become substitutes for our selves … that is how a city becomes a kind of phantasmagoria….

Susan Sontag vs John Berger

I am presenting a paper on photography and literature at an academic seminar next Monday at Hong Kong Baptist University, and this is part of what I am going to say:

IMG_20130724_0011 640

This is what Susan Sontag says about photography:

like many mass art form, photography is not practiced by most people as an art. It is mainly a social rite, a defense against anxiety, and a tool of power … Photographs document sequences of consumption carried on outside the view of family, friends and neighbors … Travel becomes a strategy for accumulating photographs. (On Photography)

I am thinking of people I know who like to photograph their food before they eat, or of parents who take photographs of their children while they’re playing the piano at home or of their families in front of the Eiffel Tower. There’s nothing wrong with doing these things (I do them myself all the time), but after a while, if we claim to be serious about photography as an art form and yet this is all we do with photography, then it no longer allows us to see anything new. It allows us to see only what we already see, putting us in a state of self-consuming and self-affirming narcissism, saying, “Look at me, look at me”.

IMG_20130813_0014 640

But a lot of what Sontag says are provocations to thought as well:

Photography implies that we know about the world if we accept it as the camera records it. But this is the opposite of understanding, which starts from not accepting the world as it looks. (On Photography)

What if we pursue photography with humility, as a way of looking at things differently? John Berger has made the point that “Every photograph presents us with two messages: a message concerning the event photographed and another concerning the shock of discontinuity” (Another Way of Telling).  He goes on to say that “Between the moment recorded and the present moment of looking, there is an abyss” ((Another Way of Telling).

IMG_20130724_0026 e 640

The abyss is when the street photograph gives us something we find hard to accept. We look, and look again, and we struggle with the meaning of the scene.

IMG_20130724_0025 640

Perhaps, then, this is the moment we enter into the realm of critique…

IMG_20130724_0012 640

Searching for Singapore III

I suppose this theme is like a visual fixation for me.

This post is dedicated to those who know what it feels like to be doing street photography in your own neighbourhood.

In our own ways, we’re all searching for something, using our cameras as visual search engines.

What are we looking for? For another way to look, to turn everything into a work of art…

IMG_20140310_0006 640

I suppose it’s about moments that surprise me.

IMG_20140310_0002 640

That tree now looks like an explosion with the HDB flat facade as backdrop…

IMG_20140310_0022 640

I keep coming back to HDB flats (public housing that 80-85% of Singaporeans live in), because it’s the cookie-cutter, middle-class, ideological environment I grew up in and which is part of who I am.

IMG_20140310_0001 640

For those looking for general info concerning public housing in Singapore, this article from Wikipedia is a good general source. You could purchase these (highly-subsidised) flats through various schemes which are generally pro-marriage, pro-family, pro-heteronormative, etc.

IMG_20140310_0013 640

It’s all very Bauhaus-influenced, with a rational/functional ethos to it.

Chua Beng-Huat, a sociologist at NUS, has a wonderful book called Political Legitimacy and Housing: Singapore’s Stakeholder Society. It looks at the ideological and social-engineering aspect of Singapore’s public housing policy.

I’m fascinated by how newness can emerge from familiar/regimental environments.

I have a thing with hawker centre food …

IMG_20140310_0016 640

These are some people I’m learning to see again with my camera.

IMG_20140310_0015 640

IMG_20140310_0023 640

These were all taken on the same day I was due to go back to Hong Kong.

At the airport … back to Hong Kong…

IMG_20140310_0019 640

Is Hong Kong any different?

IMG_20140310_0031 640

IMG_20140310_0026 640

IMG_20140310_0034 640

In the end, it’s all about finding your place, moving up or down…

I should say all of images here are from the same roll of film: Ilford XP2 in an Olympus XA2.

The Leica M6 is now my back up camera (!!!)

Thanks for reading!

London Street Photography II

From my London folder again…

IMG_3252 640

I was happy to have caught this gesture…

He’s framed by various pictures, and there’s a statement here to be made about the idealised/commodified/cosmetic appearances of the pictures vs his heartfelt sincerity. Check out the arrow that’s about to pierce his heart.

IMG_2726 640

The British Museum … it’s difficult to photograph such an iconic place because you know it has been done so many times…

I chose the seemingly unthinking approach: capture it at any angle and it’ll still look wonderful. Kudos to the architects…

IMG_2768 640

IMG_2783 640

Here’s a museum interior that plays with religious icons … there’s definitely a connection between religious devotion and museum space.

In a way, we’re here to worship art and/or the past.

IMG_2865 640

At the Victoria and Albert Museum.

Here’re the acolytes …

IMG_2888 640

I’m a tourist!

IMG_2949 640

IMG_2975 640

IMG_3130 640

IMG_3146 640

IMG_3138 640

IMG_3159 640

A busy scene with the seated person as a focal point, at the still point of the turning world …

IMG_2986 640

“At the still point of the turning world. Neither flesh nor fleshless;
Neither from nor towards; at the still point, there the dance is,
But neither arrest nor movement. And do not call it fixity,
Where past and future are gathered. Neither movement from nor towards,
Neither ascent nor decline. Except for the point, the still point,
There would be no dance, and there is only the dance.
I can only say, there we have been: but I cannot say where.”

(T. S. Eliot, “Burnt Norton”, The Four Quartets)

IMG_3390 640

Thanks for reading!

Selfies (with a nod to Samuel Beckett)

These are photographs of me, or of how I see…

We’re all shackled in one way or another, waiting for our little godots…

IMG_20140127_0009 640

I’m Estragon the poet…

IMG_20140127_0008 640

Is He arriving? Godot is always late.

IMG_20140127_0007 640

I wait and I wait …

IMG_20140127_0025 640

And I wait …

IMG_20140127_0032 640

Like Vladimir the thinker, I keep myself informed …

IMG_20140127_0037 640

I want a branded watch to tell me I am a lucky Pozzo…

IMG_20140127_0013 640

Am I a cookie-cutter person with cookie-cutter dreams and desires…

IMG_20140127_0027 640

Or can I be my own work of art, recognizable to myself…

IMG_20140127_0029 640

I want to be Lucky, my favorite beer…

IMG_20140127_0031 640

I want to be forever on the move… forever arriving with the goods…

IMG_20140127_0026 640

and then I’ll be happy-go-lucky…

IMG_20140127_0039 640

Mongkok

Again, I find myself wandering around in Mongkok.

IMG_20140121_0021 640

I find that the side streets parallel to Nathan Road are more conducive to street photography.

IMG_20140121_0005 640

The pace is slower, it’s less crowded and so you can see further and anticipate, unlike the pavements on both sides of Nathan Road on weekends or during rush hour.

IMG_20140121_0001 640

For the above, I zone-focused, snapped and turned around without even stopping.

Yes, it’s my Olympus XA2 again, loaded with Ilford XP2 400. It’s so small once you remove the flash.

So it’s always with me.

There’s yummy sugar cane juice at the coconut master’s shop.

IMG_20140121_0006 640

There’re quite a few shops selling traditional Chinese foodstuff along Woosung Street.

They sun some of their goods on the street…

IMG_20140121_0010 640

IMG_20140121_0009 640

There’re lots of people in this particular shop.

So I hung around outside for a bit.

IMG_20140121_0003 640

IMG_20140121_0012 640

This por por in the photograph below took some time to select the lap cheong (Chinese dried sausage).

So naturally I took a few shots of her.

IMG_20140121_0007 640

She suddenly turned around and said in Cantonese, “Oi, handsome, are you done? The hook is too high.”

So naturally I obliged.

Street photographers are supposed to fade into the background, but I suppose it’s hard to do so for me given my looks …

😛

IMG_20140121_0014 640

Thanks for reading!