Photographer Larry Bean is the Edge of Humanity Magazine contributor of these images.  To see Larry’s body of work, click on any photograph.

 

Spin Cycle

 

Journeys End

 

Cold Smoke

 

Equivalents

 

Change is Coming

 

Shining Sea

 

Paradise Valley Thunderhead

 

Mesquite Sand Dunes Study 7

 

Artist’s Statement 

I am a Landscape Architect with a passion for black and white photography.  Several years ago, I began studying the history of compositional influences in black and white photography in the fine art form we know today.   I soon realized that the compositional principles that most influenced photography have their beginnings in the design principles used in architecture and garden design dating back thousands of years.  The most commonly used techniques for many photographers come from a European tradition and is the source of most of what are commonly referred to as the rules of composition. These rules started with the ancient Greek discovery of the golden ratio over two thousand years ago and eventually led to the commonly used rule of thirds.  The hallmark of the European tradition is that aesthetic quality can be mathematically and intellectually determined.   The photographic compositional style that has had the most impact on fine art black and white photography, particularly American black and white fine art photography we see today is, I believe, from the Asian tradition.  The Asian tradition of composition, known as notan can be traced back to Zen Buddhist monks a thousand years ago and to Taoist monks a thousand years before that.  Translated as light/dark harmony, notan can be used to reveal the essence of an image by finding its abstract compositional structure.   Notan was the inspiration for the American Modernist art movement and was used by artist Georgia O'Keeffe and early fine art photographers Alfred Steiglitz, Edward Weston, Ansel Adams and many others.    Where the European tradition gives us rules about how to think about art, the Asian tradition helps the artist illustrate feelings.  Although both compositional traditions inform my work, I feel that notan offers a much more robust path in identifying, visualizing and creating an interesting image.  For me, if an image evokes a feeling or emotion not easily put into words, then mission accomplished.  I hope you will find images that will cause such a response when viewing any fine art black and white photographs, including mine. 

 

All images and text © Larry Bean

 

 

 See also:

Water

By Larry Bean

 

Edge of Humanity Magazine is an independent nondiscriminatory platform that has no religious, political, financial, or social affiliations.
We are committed to publishing the human condition, the raw diverse global entanglement, with total impartiality.

 

 

COMMISSION FREE
CONTRACT FREE
Online platform for artists to sell their creations

 

 

Follow Edge of Humanity Magazine

 Email Subscriptions

Follow Edge of Humanity Magazine
Please enter your email address below

Join 74.3K other subscribers

 

WordPress Bloggers

Follow Edge of Humanity Magazine on WordPress.com

Not on WordPress?

Don’t Forget to add

https://edgeofhumanity.com/

to your reader or bookmarks

Thank you!

 

BACK TO HOME PAGE

Search Site