Date Joined: 8 August 2002 Hello My name is Daniel O'Byrne, Â
The belief that a good photograph is the result of a good camera places the importance upon the equipment rather than upon the photographer. It emphasizes the machine rather than the man, the tool rather than the artist, the technology rather than the artistic intent. It is as if Monet had been told that the reason why his paintings were so beautiful was because he had such good paintbrushes. Or as if Paul Bocuse’s culinary excellence was explained away by his use of superlative pots and pans. Or again if Yo-Yo Ma had been informed that his Stradivarius was solely responsible for the stunning quality of his music.Â
One can be inspired and have an idea, be very creative in making this idea into a work of art, have developed the required level of craftsmanship, without the outcome of one’s efforts being motivated by the desire to follow a vision for one’s entire body of work. Vision is an overriding envelope that encompasses both inspiration and creativity. It is a blanket that covers the entire artist’s work, a blanket that often comes later in the life of an artist, after one has perfected one’s art and moved beyond the commonplace outcome that most artists have to go through. For this reason I placed vision as the third step of this process. I placed it there not because it comes necessarily at the end of the process but because in life it is often something that artists discover later on.
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Certainly, a master needs a masterful instrument, be it a camera, paintbrushes, pots and pans or a violin, as in my examples, or other tool, since this list can be expanded to include many other professions. But to say that the quality of the art is caused solely by the quality of the instrument is to miss the point altogether about the importance of the artist. It is missing the point about the human factor, about the man or the woman that actually made use of this instrument. After all, art is made by artists and not by tools. Tools are inanimate objects that need someone to set them in motion. And to set a tool in motion so that art is created through the use of this tool, an artist is needed.
I am now retired from working as a Mental Health professional having worked in the Royal Air Force and National Health Service, giving me more time to persue my photography and artwork. I am a Semi Professional Photoghrapher. Here you will find a collection of my photographs and a selection of Digital Art, Traditional Painting and Sketches that I have also used the digital medium to enhance. Please feel free to pass on any comments. My Camera Gear
http://www.renderosity.com/news.php?viewStory=13527 Here you can find my personal website: DIGITALARTZONE Contact me: E-Mail Artwork for sale: My work Tips and tricks: Nature and wildlife Photography Tips and tricks: Bird Photography
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Comments (38)
SIGMAWORLD
Excellent capture!
RodolfoCiminelli
Wonderful and fantastic shot my friend......!!!!
marybelgium
beautiful !
kbrog
Beautiful Owl and a excellent capture! :)
bazza
Fabulous capture of this owl Danny, it looks beautiful well done!!
anahata.c
I always learn so much of what I want to learn when I come here. I've photographed birds for several months now, but mainly birds who feed at the water (or swim in it---in Lake Michigan); but I've come nowhere near what you've captured day after day in your magnificent bird shots. Here you have a landing, and there's so much amazing mixed energy here, it's almost as if he worked out the pose for you. It's not just the clarity of the wings while-in-motion (that everyone expects of you), it's the wonderfully diverse position of them, the dual directions, how one is more extended than the other, breaking the expected norm for some of us that a landing would have some sort of 'symmetry'. And standing at the center of this diverse landing is the owl's torso, which---like an owl---seems wholly non-plussed by its landing: He's still and stolid as can be; and, but for one foot slightly splayed, he's already into a 'rest' mode while his wings are still settling in for the afternoon. Beautifully composed; and the stone he settles on is a lot like him: Solid as it gets, unmoving and multi-layered. That's a beautiful piece of stone! Whatever you did that took you so much time paid of beautifully, Danny. A beautiful yet truly serene image.
iaacf
But it was worth your effort!. What a beautiful shot this is.
dochtersions
Wonderful, just like an angel.