MOVING HORIZON

It started out as a challenge.

In a discussion on photography, a friend asked me if I could do a series of “landscapes that do not look like landscapes”. The idea intrigued me. After some reflection, I decided to try the technique of moving the camera in synchronization with the movement of the lens. This is certainly not new or unique. Many have played with this technique before, and I shall not be the last to try it out. But I did take it more seriously than most, because I found in it a way of creative release.   Read more
It started out as a challenge.

In a discussion on photography, a friend asked me if I could do a series of “landscapes that do not look like landscapes”. The idea intrigued me. After some reflection, I decided to try the technique of moving the camera in synchronization with the movement of the lens. This is certainly not new or unique. Many have played with this technique before, and I shall not be the last to try it out. But I did take it more seriously than most, because I found in it a way of creative release.

At that time, my career was in full swing. I was working on book projects, stories for magazines like National Geographic, New York Times Sunday Magazine, GEO and Stern, as well as annual reports and brochures for corporate clients.

My professional work requires rigorously composed photographs and interesting content for my clients. Complete control and meticulous planning are therefore exigent. The project “Moving Horizon” was done in reaction to this. With a combination of long exposure and camera movement, I could produce images free from the restrictions of professionalism. It was an interesting experience to lose control of my images and leave things to the combined movements of the lens and the camera.

I found that I could produce images that resemble Chinese ink drawings, with blank background and flowing lines. The images incline towards abstraction, rather than representation, of reality.
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