Moments of Transparency
April 9th, 2009
My fascination with windows began when I took my trusty Daisy Red Rider BB gun and took aim at the neighbors large glass window, gently squeezed the trigger as my cousin taught me and fired. I heard a very distinctive and sharp ‘crack’ when that little copper ball hit the window and to my amazement put a hole through the Thompson’s window pane. I never expected that something so small could penetrate something so large.
Despite the panic that ensued, I wanted to see my handiwork, so climbed over the low fence I had used as my rifle support and began to examine the spider like crack and small hole I had created. And just as suddenly as the BB hit the glass, my neighbor grabbed me by the collar and marched me to my Mom to explain what I had done.
Regardless of the punishment that followed, my fascination with windows followed me into adulthood, but without the BB gun. I noticed that whenever I sat on the train, in a cafe, or anywhere that magic transparent plane existed it was as if I was invisible to the rest of the world and what transpired around me was mine to view in private.
As a photographer I was completely mesmerized by an image Jodi Cobb had made of a young woman in a London cafe looking out toward a busy street at dusk. Her expression, her posture and the reflection of the activity around her helped me realize that as humans we all seem to feel as if our own existence and feelings are hidden behind an anonymous transparent plane. Perhaps a pane of glass allows us to forget that we too are exposed to the world. Our expressions become genuine as we allow the masks we wear to melt away as we observe and safely experience the world around us.
It was these events that inspired me to begin a multi year long series of images I call Moments of Transparency. The images I present in this series were primarily taken in my hometown of San Francisco. Always driven to replicate Ms. Cobb’s exquisite moment I am often found looking towards window panes hoping that in an instant I too will be able to capture a moment of unguarded authenticity.
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