Left hand picture: rather obvious illustration of Roland Barthes ideas on the relationship between the punctum and studium in photography.
Blunt– 16th Feb 2016
Left hand picture: rather obvious illustration of Roland Barthes ideas on the relationship between the punctum and studium in photography.
“The first excrescence did not pop. It was already some two foot six in diameter and still swelling fast.
“It must pop soon,” she muttered.
But still it did not. It kept on expanding until it must have been all of five feet in diameter. Then it stopped growing. It looked like a huge, repulsive bladder. A tremor and a shake passed through it. It shuddered jellywise, became detached, and wobbled into the air with the uncertainty of an overblown bubble.
In a lurching, amoebic way it ascended for ten feet or so. There it vacillated, steadying into a more stable sphere. Then, suddenly, something happened to it. It did not explode. Nor was there any sound. Rather, it seemed to slit open, as if it had been burst into instantaneous bloom by a vast number of white cilia which rayed out in all directions.”
John Wyndham ‘The Kraken Wakes’ 1953
All I wanted to do was get a picture of this abandoned plate of chips backlit by the sunset, and these lovers came and stood right behind it and snogged for what seemed like hours. Eventually I gave up and included them in the shot. It was only then that I realised why, today, I had stumbled across several men with pained expressions kneeling on pebbles in front of their girlfriends (it must really hurt kneeling on pebbles) and a larger number than usual of lost balloons drifting through the streets. Well well, it’s Valentine’s day, again. Where does the time go?
More to the point, I have now discovered where the fairground hibernates in winter.