A walk in Provence

Sat 28 May 2011 11:12:08 AM EDT — Comments: 0

The stones were carved from mountain rocks such a long time ago that thyme has re-colonized them. All the way to the top of church towers. A Provence village is a taming of the wild, a wilding of the tame, an ancient balance of sun and shade, a garden. And each fountain is a miracle (see "a walk in provence", a new series in OTHER SEASONS).

Ice spell

Sat 26 Feb 2011 02:26:54 PM EST — Comments: 0

Ice, further north, is different. Here, in Toronto, it is a sad and mean thing, the greyish byproduct of snow and traffic fumes. Not so on the north shore of Lake Huron. No so on Lake Superior. Ice there is pure and glorious and free. If you look into it, you won't see the mangled remains of human obsessions. What you'll see is a blueprint of the world. I fell under its spell.

There are three new series in WINTER: ice anatomy; superior 1, frozen experiments; superior (...)

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I just spent a few days among fish

Fri 04 Feb 2011 07:20:43 AM EST — Comments: 0

    I was treated as one of them, a kindness I will never forget. They knew I was not, of course: my skin is of a single (rather dull) color, while theirs are riots of yellows and greens and blues and reds. My shape did not impress them much either--entirely predictable, they said, why do you humans all look the same? They were concerned about my breathing, this weird tube which kept me on the surface of things. And my swimming left to be desired. Overall, they saw (...)

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Ocean frolicks

Sun 30 Jan 2011 06:03:55 PM EST — Comments: 0

The Yucatan ocean, brimming over with light and tickled by a thousand yellow fish, was in a playful mood that day. It churned out wave after wave and threw them against the rocks with peels of laughter. Sheer delight as spray obscured the sun. I danced naked on the warm sand. There was no one on the beach but an ancient Mayan God who refused to tell me his name (see "Ocean frolicks", a new series in OTHER SEASONS).

Regarding the Crowe river and the narcissism of trees

Wed 12 Jan 2011 07:11:28 AM EST — Comments: 2

They are handsome and they know it. In best narcissistic tradition, trees spend an inordinate amount of time generating their own image in lakes and rivers. Even puddles get enlisted in the service of arboreal vanity: any body of water will do, as a short walk by the Crowe river makes clear. But who's making use of whom here? And who's the greater Narcissus? The Crowe, near Marmora, is a wily river. The blurred reflections it yields display its own surface--textured by winds, (...)

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Zinnias...

Wed 18 Aug 2010 08:01:23 AM EDT — Comments: 0

Zinnias are the flowers of my childhood. My mother and I would go to the garden in the morning, she carrying cutters and I a wicker basket as big as myself. We made huge bouquets. "They will keep sadness away," she said. And they did, most of the time (see "zinnias", a new series in SUMMER).

Travels in Lilliput

Wed 23 Jun 2010 07:07:19 AM EDT — Comments: 0

Maybe the universe we are familiar with is only one among many. I have stumbled upon what seems to be another world while doing photography, and felt something of Gulliver's amazement the day he woke up in Lilliput: here is another reality, infinitely small, which I did not know existed. Mosses (SPRING: travels in Lilliput-1) and lilies (travels in Lilliput-2) have dramas of their own, matters of life and death. They pursue them with passion and utter indifference to human concerns. (...)

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Late frost

Wed 12 May 2010 07:12:33 AM EDT — Comments: 0

It was not really a surprise, there is always a frost in May. But it was a shock. A summery April, bolstered by much talk about climate change (has not somebody claimed that Canada might be one of a handful of countries actually benefiting from the warming of the earth?) had lulled my tulips and I into imagining this year might be different. There would be no frost in May. Summer was here for the believer. They grew with wild abandon, these tulips of mine, (...)

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Caponga

Thu 08 Apr 2010 07:35:52 AM EDT — Comments: 0

Images of the human are usually excluded from this site but I had to make an exception for the fishermen of Caponga: their work, their bodies and their boats are immemorial, as ancient as the ocean. The endurance of these men belongs to nature (See Caponga-1, a new series in OTHER SEASONS). Another exception is made in Caponga-2, the person is so small under the sky, and walks the beach with so much respect... Maybe Caponga is one of the rare places where humans are nature.

PS: (...)

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Other seasons...

Wed 07 Apr 2010 09:30:03 PM EDT — Comments: 0

They do feel like other seasons, these climates of distant places. They are neither spring, nor summer, nor autumn, nor winter, as we know them in Ontario. Nature in Brazil, or in Arizona, follows a different song. OTHER SEASONS, a new album, will gather pictures of other lands and their unfamiliar seasons.