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Mailinglist:wwp@yahoogroups.com
Sender:toyin adepoju
Date/Time:2009-May-07 18:27:00
Subject:Re: June WWP event theme: Time

Thread:


wwp@yahoogroups.com: Re: June WWP event theme: Time toyin adepoju 2009-May-07 18:27:00
Dear Keith,
Could I please blog and Facebook this brief but rich meditation of yours on time,making sure I give you credit?
Thanks.
Toyin

--- On Thu, 5/7/09, Keith Martin <#removed#> wrote:
From: Keith Martin <#removed#>
Subject:  June WWP event theme: Time
To: #removed#
Date: Thursday, May 7, 2009, 5:25 AM











    
            
            


      
      The theme for the June WWP event is Time.



The precise dates and times will be announced separately, but I 

wanted to write a little something to help people get started with 

their ideas...



We can't see, touch or taste it, but Time affects us all.



We have many phrases to describe the passage of time and its affects, 

including "the ravages of time", "time flies" (whether straight like 

an arrow or curved like a banana), "time waits for no man", and "time 

takes its toll". Many of these phrases are used as warnings to watch 

out and keep track of time, as "running out of time" is a common 

experience for us all.



We speak of time running at different speeds, subjectively at least; 

when we're enjoying something it flies past, but when we're doing 

something deathly dull it crawls. Einstein found that time really 

does run at different speeds in an objective sense too, as set out in 

his theory of relativity - although this doesn't explain why waiting 

for a kettle to boil always seems to double the time it takes.



Whether we regard something as maturing or degenerating, we are 

describing the effects of the passage of time. Time is evident in new 

growth woods and ancient forests, in natural erosion and weathered 

storm pilings, and in the dynamism of small children as well as the 

quiet of the elderly. It is shown in the accumulation of dust in 

quiet corners and in the rush-hour crowds of commuters seen every 

weekday in cities around the world.



We live our lives by timetables (or schedules, however you choose to 

pronounce the word). We use alarms to wake us up (although in my case 

I never actually hear the alarm), we know when we have to leave the 

house in order to get somewhere by a certain time, and we try to get 

to bed by a certain time as well. We speak of good or bad timing, 

free time, time alone, 'me' time, time for change - yet, despite how 

vital time is to us all in every part of our lives, we cannot 

actually affect time in any way; it marches on.



Showing time in some way, capturing its effects or essence in 

pictures, can be a challenge, but it offers tremendous creative and 

aesthetic possibilities. Time-lapse photography, very slow shutter 

speeds and other ways of using time to affect the picture-taking 

process itself are as valid as concentrating on recording aspects of 

time within the subject.



How will you convey time in a panorama?



Keith


 

      

    
    
	
	 
	
	








	


	
	


      

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