Insight into an image…

Blossoms on Roof detailDetail of “Blossoms on Roof”

I did an interview recently that came out in the Patriot Ledger today. Since it was a newsprint edition piece I’ve transcribed it here as in the end it provided me with more insight into the above image. The interview was done by Peggy Mullen.

How do you describe the difference between your photography and your visual art? I like to capture a few images that represent an idea that has a theme. I get the biggest joy from being able to install a big series of images in a gallery or a museum.

And the Art Complex exhibit is an example of this? Yes. When I was in Japan I read a lot of haiku, that very short Japanese verse, usually about nature, and I also got into writing it myself. A lot of the photographs emulate that.

At the exhibit, there’s a long list of words besides one of your images. Are the words yours, and did you intend for them to be displayed with the photo? You’ll see lofty words like “inspiration” and words like “cafe” at the bottom. I would go to the cafe and meet people and take photos and write about it. It’s a list of words that are key to putting together the show.

On your website there are a series of photos with words on the images. Are you saying that’s what you felt when you took the photo, or are you instructing the observer what to feel? I like the combination of words and pictures, and if a picture is worth a thousand words, why not express those words? I stuck some of those words into the images. The words are small, and it’s hard to see some of them. I want a person to step back, look at the image and then get up close and examine it and see what else might be hidden there.

A press release from the museum reads “One of Castagna’s favorite techniques is using shallow depth of field to create abstractions.” What does this mean? I think the best image that represents this is “Blossoms on Roof”. What I mean is one of the most creative things you can do with a camera is to determine its depth of field. If you have a good lens, you can decide if you want something sharp or blurred. There I wanted the roof sharp and blossoms blurred. You have opposites, one is man-made and another is natural. It’s a creative tool I use in a lot of my photography.

If I had my druthers, and since this is my blog, I do, I’d add this to my final answer: Nature soft and beautiful, man-made objects real and solid. The roof’s wave and undulating quality suggests a flow moving in and out of nature. Together they weave a complex and interconnected pattern of balance.

 

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Artist Talk

 

Below is an excerpt from an artist talk given at The Art Complex Museum on August 4, 2011

Art Complex Museum

A picture is worth a thousand words. What does that phrase mean?

Up until recent times I thought that it meant words were unnecessary where and when pictures were involved. That the picture was enough. But if a picture is worth a thousand words why not express them?

Keeping an artist journal is one way of expressing the worth.

worth: the quality that makes something desirable, valuable or useful.

A picture is worth a thousand words.

Thus far I’ve expressed about 100 words in my artist talk. That’s 1/10th of a picture.

There are 10 pictures in this show. Ten pictures are worth ten thousand words.

Art is expressing worth.

Art could be described as minimum matter with maximum thought.

Words and pictures have always intrigued me. In fact these pictures were inspired by haiku.

A picture is worth a haiku.

A picture is worth a few well chosen words.

You might think that this contradicts the phrase, “A picture is worth a thousand words.” However one could say that a haiku is a distillation of a thousand words. Between the lines and pauses of a haiku lie suspended these 1000 words, left out so that you can imagine them yourself.

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Catalog

art and idea catalogHere’s the cover of my latest catalog. The design is complete and it will be used as a companion piece for my upcoming show at The Art Complex Museum in Duxbury. For more information on that show see elsewhere on this website.

Creating a catalog or book is a great way to thresh out ideas for upcoming exhibitions or shows. The space of the book format allows one to play with different ideas and then translate those ideas to the gallery or exhibition space. After creating the catalog several ideas dropped out that are now incorporated in the upcoming show.

If you are interested in getting a copy of the catalog just let me know. They cost about $35 each since I make them in short runs. There is talk about doing a larger run which could bring the costs down.

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T to infinity

infinity of thought

What’s this you might be saying. I’m making a small run of postcards and stickers that look just like this. If it works for me, I may do a bunch and distribute. I’m thinking it’s a teaser, a mystery of sorts to attract attention and interest in my upcoming show at the Art Complex.

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Kyoto Aesthetics

Table of Aesthetics for Kyoto Japan

Table of Aesthetic Values, Kyoto version

Based on my previous chart entitled “The Table of Aesthetic Values”, I have just made a Kyoto version in preparation for my upcoming show entitled “Kyoto: Art and Idea” at the Art Complex Museum. The chart is a made up of cut-outs from Kyoto photographs which will be part of the exhibition at the museum. Written on the bottom of the chart is the original formula I devised for art: “Art could be described as minimum matter with maximum thought: M < T ∞”. On the right it is written, “The physical universe has its elements, so too does the artist’s universe. Here is a snapshot – a frozen moment of an everchanging world – of a volatile creative universe that occasionally reveals itself in a finalized art form.” Elements that have been added to the Kyoto chart include journal: poetry, gesture, zen, haiku, shinto, seasons, blossoms, equivalence, bokeh, nature, isolation, obscurity, temple, cafe, Kyoto, imperfection, travel, zeitgeist, framework, symbol and icon.

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