February 5, 2012

The Online Magazine For Evolving Minds

Minnesota Sunrise: A Photographer’s Reflection












Photography, it is said, tells painting what it should not, what it cannot, do.

This photo was taken shortly after sunrise on a lakeshore in northern Minnesota. On the shore that is implied to the left there was a fiery orange streak in the water rolling ashore, an accident of the sun’s angle and the absence of fog. Equally on the side of the lake to the west (the right) the fog was thick and the lake glass like.

The reflection of the boat, this perfect reflection, seemed more a painting than a true life image. And in fact this is not what my eye saw. What I saw as I turned and set up to take the picture was grey fog and green reeds and two boats at rest under the lightening  morning sky to the west. It all suggested a good day of fishing ahead. What the camera saw is what you see here: probably, certainly, an accident of white balance and angles.

But here is the thing about what is and what can be. The camera saw what I, unconsciously, wanted to see, because it felt that way: a painting by Winslow Homer, a Matisse blue,  a quiet, surreal mindscape where all was possible, where everything was in its proper place; a homage to childhood’s memory of a place occupied by happy elephants and talking monkeys, a place long gone but apparently still with me.


Photo Credit

Minnesota Sunrise © 2010 Michael Lebowitz, Long Run Picture Company



Recent Michael Lebowitz Articles:

avatar About Michael Lebowitz

I write and take pictures because it is my way of telling stories. I run because it reminds me, everyday, that I am here. I have no idea where the writing comes from.

What I do know is that I start with what I know and imagine the rest. In the end some of it is true and some of it is made up; memory plus time equals semi-fiction, others call it creative non fiction. And if the “I” in the piece has a different name than mine, it is fiction through and through.

My photography tells a story in a very different way. The pictures seem to come from who I was and what I care about. When the words are coming honestly and the pictures are sharp and knowing, the stories tell me who I am today.

I also write at Running Before Daylight and my photography can be seen at The Long Run Picture Company

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Comments

  1. avatar G2G says:

    Love. It.

    And you.

  2. avatar oscar says:

    Great shot Michael! It makes me of think of being on the water in my kayak early in the morning, alone & surrounded by peace and quiet. my favorite time

  3. Lovely, evocative photograph. Photography and painting each in their own way reflect a perceived reality that is akin to yet removed from the real world.

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