What Camera?
Look what photographer Robert Creamer can do with a flatbed scanner
- By Marian Smith Holmes
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Creamer also made frequent visits to Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden in Miami, where he gathered plants for Fairchild Jade 2005, a 40- by 56-inch photograph in the exhibition. The image is an abstract tangle of turquoise and reddish-hued petals that Creamer arranged on a glass plate before putting them on his portable scanner. He kept the flowers for two years, periodically scanning them. In the first version, "they look so aquatic, it's like looking down into a coral reef," he says. "As they dried they became new material with new interpretations. They seemed to drift. They became skeletal." For a final scan, he burned them, capturing the plants in a ghostly swirl of smoke.
The scanner, Creamer says, allows him to "start with a complete blank slate" instead of "selecting a portion" of a given landscape to shoot with a camera. Ultimately, "it's not the process that is groundbreaking," he adds, "it's what's being captured that is groundbreaking." His old, large-format camera is now for sale.
Marian Smith Holmes is an associate editor at Smithsonian.
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Comments (3)
Have Mr. Creamer look into the field of Minerals specimens the crystals forms, I used a microscope of 10 power to photograph them. bill
Posted by bill wall on April 13,2009 | 06:32 PM
We had the wonderful opportunity to see Mr. Creamer's work during a recent exhibition in Naples, Florida. Seeing his work "in the flesh" was the experience of a lifetime. He was present and kindly gave us a tour and a fairly detailed explanation of his technique. His innovations opened our eyes even further to the beauty of nature that is all around us. Bravo!
Posted by Joan and Ted Labow on February 21,2008 | 11:55 AM
I took a photography class my senior year in 1997 at Oldfields. Bob opened my eyes into a world through the lens and since I have always carried a camera with me. His ability to see a new and inovative way to capture a moment or event or even an image has always impacted me. I can't wait to see where he takes us next!
Posted by Katherine W. Morse on December 15,2007 | 12:11 PM