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Thomas
Payne Photographs
What follows is a rundown of groups
of photographs I have done. I don't include the silver things I did
before digital photography as that would mean I would have to scan
them. Also not included are many photographs not part of a group. At
some point I will at least put early Amiga Computer work in here. Not
very good, but sort of interesting.
Recent
History
This is my photographic blog. Updated pretty much monthly. Just joining in the chorus of web noise. Unfettered
by nasty quality issues.
ZOlZ
From then. Just figured out which ones were the best and left out the others. Print images are 28 inches wide. These words seem familiar.
ZOll
From then. Just figured out which ones were the best and left out the others. Print images are 28 inches wide.
Big Things
These wane on the small screen, but here
they are anyway.
Little
People
The
alternate title is 'Soles, Braces, and Rucks'. But I like the stupid
title. Not that the other one isn't. Kind of the same as 'Gatherings'
(see below), but the prints are smaller. And so are the people.
Iowa
Towns
So,
somehow I managed to end up with a bunch of photographs of Iowa towns.
Why not make a virtual tour? The photographs are
of the most interesting aspect of each town. Okay, so I didn't sweat
the choices too much.
Gatherings
We in our natural
habitats. Chance choreography.
The first time I drove across Iowa it was night the entire
way and my wife slept through it. Just as well I thought. The
second time I drove across Iowa it was day, and I decided to
photograph the state. So, ten years later I finally got around
to it. The original print image sizes are around 11 X 17 inches.
Italy
I
went to Italy and brought back a Fake Rolex and some photographs. The
photographs are romantic images that are unapologetically embedded in
photographic tradition. The Fake Rolex is unapologetically embedded in
the Rolectic tradition. The original print image sizes are about 6 X
9 inches.
Las
Vegas is only 90 miles from Area 51. That may be important, it also
may not be. The original prints are about 24 X 32
inches.
The Past
s
(2002)
T he ori gin al p rint s a re 9x14 inc hes.

This is a set of prints done
in conjunction with the interactive CD below.
Note: You need the Shockwave plug-in to view these half-sized examples
from the CD. You can get it here or
just blow it off and look at something else.
Following a fairly
successful bout with Sometimes (see below) I went in reductionism mode and created this CD without any mouse-clicks. Seemed like a good idea at the time. With further revisions I added mouse-clicks, but this unfortunately took away from the ZenFrustration of the program
which was part of the point.
While trying to finish SO a couple of things
happened which guaranteed its place on a dusty shelf. First, the web
happened: With so much time spent touring the world with glazed eyes
fixed to a monitor the last thing anyone (including myself) would want
to do is look at a creative work on the screen. CDs became quickly
outmoded as a vehicle for expression. The second thing: This program
depends on
Macromedia Director, the application it was created with. I wrote the
program depending on what I estimated to be the approximate speed of
computers when the program was done. Computers didn't let me down,
but Macromedia did. They channeled their resources to web programs leaving
Director (and things done in Director) a slow program fraught with
compatibility
problems.
From here on out I want hard copy.
Note: You need the Shockwave plug-in to view these half-sized examples
from the CD. You can get it here or
just blow it off and look at something else.
Photography
is a pretty darn democratic medium. I made this CD program to stretch
the
boundaries
a
bit more,
a.k.a. why
not
make
an
exhibit
on a CD? The images can move and involve the viewer in really nice
ways.
When I started the CD it was titled "Things Disappear
When You Look Real Close", and it was supposed to be about
x-ray glasses and such. It turned out to be about the idea of
random versus
determined
fates.
Sometimes was successful, and Voyager (the only
creative CD publisher) had wanted to publish it. It was not to be, as
Voyager bit the dust in a
take-over
two months later. Oh well. It would all be history at this point anyway
(see above).
You
can get either Sometimes or SO on CD-ROM.
I am not sure why I called this series of prints ' Beans'. I think
that perhaps the title has the right mix of mundane and inane. The original
prints are about 10x15 inches.
Armed with an Apple Quicktake camera (state of the art at the time),
some sort of crappy ink-jet printer, and a box of Cranes paper, I
set about
to document the things around me. The original prints are about 4x5
inches. I included two tries at one of the photographs because I
thought it was
interesting.
Things get more technical as one goes back in this chronology. With
this series I was limited to a flat-bed scanner to get images in.
To get them
out I had to travel 30 miles with the digital files on SyQuest disks
to have them put on photographic film. Then I had to travel again to
pick them up, print them out on conventional photographic paper, assess
what needed changing, and then do the whole thing over again. The original
prints are about 10x13 inches. If you don't know what a SyQuest disk
is consider yourself fortunate.
I really like this series of photographs, but only the garden-club
set seems to agree with me. I see them as raw things that parallel
the still-lifes
at the beginning of photography. They were photographed with a flat-bed
scanner
and printed (small)
with one of the first color ink-jet printers on 8x10 paper. I haven't
looked at the prints lately, but I bet that they now have the patina
of a poorly processed albumen print.
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