Chasing Flow

By Patrick La Roque

I’m looking at my keyboard, head down, eyes lowered, drawing a blank, mostly. But I do enjoy how its keys twack and thud when I hit them. There’s XTC on my speakers and a cup o’ Joe next to my right hand and a timer ticking down on my iPad. Seven minutes gone. Damn. When did time get so fucking unbearable? 

I’ve also never uttered the words “cup o’ Joe” before. Ever.
Ok. Ten minutes now. Seriously?


There’s nothing quite like the aftermath of a winter storm in the countryside. When the weather dabbles in magic, and the sun comes out but temperatures hold, cold enough for the snow cover to be stilled, heavy, a mimic of eternity. You forget greyness in these moments; you forget it ever existed. And light glares and shines and sparkles and all those synonyms fight each other while you let yourself fall and the ground slurps you up and the dog barks and the kids laugh. It’s all blue and white and full of fire.

I’m not as compulsive with a camera as I once was. I see our three children getting older, I know our time with them is getting shorter with each passing day, and I tend to prefer being present, fully, instead of looking in. I don’t always succeed, and it’s a shift no one has noticed, I’m sure. But I’m trying. 

The images in this post represent increasingly brief, momentary interruptions.

Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi passed away last Fall. He was a Hungarian-American psychologist who became known for recognizing and naming the concept of "flow”. Flow is what we often describe as a state of grace, when the world disappears, and our attention becomes entirely consumed by the task at hand. It is typically associated with artists and musicians, but any immersive endeavour can induce a state of flow. In fact, Csikszentmihalyi was a rock climber and painter, and his first clue into the potential universality of this idea was the recognition of a similar state of mind during both activities. 

What’s fascinating is that, according to his research, this would simply be the biological by-product of our brains being unable to process more than 60 to 100 bits of information per second. From what I understand, when we reach a flow-state our minds enter a sort of suspended existence, with all exterior input disabled. But this isn’t automatic. What Csikszentmihalyi discovered is that flow only happens if a task is 1) meaningful to us, and 2) if we are pushing against our limits, stretching our abilities. Our entire brainpower needs to be assigned to a single, all consuming undertaking.

I know perfectly well how to trigger this state. I’ve spent most of my life pursuing it, before I even knew it existed. And the camera is a conduit, and music, and painting… these paths are clear to me. But I wonder: can existence lead to flow? Could we absorb enough of any given moment and reach it, without artifice? We would remain invisible, of course. No pictures to share, no songs to sing. No mountains to check-off a map.

Just a quiet journey, among billions.
Without any traces left behind.
I wonder.

Textures of vicinity

By Jonas Rask

Today is day 7 of February 2022. It marks the first full week of our KAGE202202 theme. Contrary to almost all of my KAGE colleagues I chose not to set any limitations for my project, neither in gear nor context or content. Well, it’s not entirely accurate, since I actually stated in my “Letter of intent” that I would try and return to a time when my photography wasn’t as restrictive as I felt it had become.

Obviously this “battle-plan” has a lot to do with me not being an official ambassador for Fujifilm anymore. I’m not even sure that me leaving the program changes anything in terms of my creativity, but I will tell you this..

The past month I have felt more visually creative than I have done in last 5 years.

It’s not that I disliked being an ambassador. I loved it. I loved almost every part of it. But what people need to understand is that when you do such a thing at the level that I was suddenly doing it at, you suddenly feel limited in what you can express. Even though no one has ever told me to do things in a certain way, I couldn’t help but feel pressure coming from within myself.

The pressure to always “1-up” what I did the day before.
The pressure to always put out better writing than the post that came before what I was currently writing.
The pressure to grow and stay relevant on various social media outlets.

All while trying to juggle my full time profession and my family and friends.

How I had the surplus energy to keep at it for 7 years I will never know. But I was growing tired. And 2 years of pandemic isolation didn’t exactly help.

So I did the only sensible thing.

I stopped and took a good long hard look at the whole situation. I acted on it, and it was definitely in due time.

Let me ask you a question.

Have you ever walked outside, stopped, faced the sun, head tilted slightly backwards, closed your eyes and taken a long deep breath? Have you?

Then you know exactly how these last 6 weeks have felt in regards to my photographic identity and creativity. I won’t say that I’m free, since I was never bound by anything - But I’m starting to regain some of the pure joy that made me do this in the first place.

My pressure is off me.

So this past week I’ve been documenting my everyday doings. However small they might have been. Just like I did when I first started photography. I’ve worn a camera all day, everyday like I always do, and I’ve shot left and right. Just because it was fun and because it’s what I love to do.

I have been feeding my own instagram channel with various documentary/street styled images since that’s basically what I’ve enjoyed shooting. But tonight I noticed this tiny little plant that Christine has put on our dining room table. I was so drawn to its minuscule size and texture that I wanted to capture it.

The following 10 minutes I shot 10 shots within an immediate vicinity of 10 meters

This is my new beginning.

“Textures of Vicinity”

All images shot on Fujifilm X-Pro3 and the XF80mm f/2.8 Macro

Some of these images might be well suited for background use, so I’ve packed them all up for you to download without watermarks in full resolution. You can download the .zip file HERE

Recette

BY VINCENT BALDENSPERGER

Mes coups de coeur photographiques restent le Portrait et le Reportage-Documentaire, une approche personnelle, un lien direct entre un sujet, ma sensibilité et l’outil. Un peu comme un cuisinier, il y a le contact avec mon sujet, certaines émotions puis mes recettes en fonction des inspirations, ce que deviennent ces images en post-traitement. Quasiment aucune retouche, aucun artifice, l’essentiel doit être là et pouvoir s’exprimer simplement, sans explications ni légendes superflues. Des images à ressentir, à goûter, à vivre.

Ingrédients identiques, ces 5 portraits réalisés avant cette pandémie, re-cuisinés aujourd’hui en deux recettes. Au final c’est toujours une question de goûts…

Birds, Birthdays, Basketball and Bad Weather

BY BERT STEPHANI

I’m not necessarily proud of the images i’ve shot so far for this project, visually there’s nothing special. But I am proud of the fact that so far I’ve been able to withstand the Instagram-temptation. By that I mean the urge to create pictures that I know will get easy likes. I know plenty of techniques, locations and subjects that I could use to make work that grabs the attention. But that’s not what I want this project to be. For me it’s not about showing off, it’s about introspection. If the stars align and I’m in a great location with fantastic light and a stunning model, I’m sure going to shoot that. Those picture-friendly moments do happen after all. But life isn’t a long uninterrupted string of perfect pictures. That doesn’t mean life isn’t interesting. I’m very grateful for the sudden appearance of spooky birds, getting the family together to celebrate a birthday, watching my daughter hit a threepointer and experiencing the drama of a rainstorm.

All shot with the X-Pro3 and the 33mm F1.4, except for 2 images with the 16mm F1.4 just to switch things up a bit.

Week 28 - The Dream

BY DEREK CLARK

Last night I dreamed I was a cleaner in a massive posh house. I kept falling asleep exhausted, but each time I woke up, the house was messier and the owners were due back any minute. I would rush around picking things up but get nowhere. Kids parties would take place while I was asleep and I would wake to balloons, cake and toys everywhere. The house would also get bigger every time I attempted to clean it. Rooms would lead to other rooms, which would then lead to more rooms, causing total disorientation.

I think the dream might be something to do with being on a never-ending conveyor belt of shooting and editing, with shots often coming in faster than I can edit them.

I came across these miniature canons in a completely empty house this week.

This week I had 5 photography shoots and 9 videos shoots, which forced me to work on Sunday. I spent 11 hours on Saturday fitting a new floor in my mum's kitchen with my brother and my son. I had a total of 30 minutes to wander during daylight hours this week to take personal pictures for this project. It poured with rain. Am I making excuses for my poor performance here? Absolutely!

This (horizontal, but intact) office is all that is left of a 4x4 centre that rebuilt one of my old Land Rovers on a new chassis. Loved it!

On Thursday night, I did my first live talk to a photography club since 2019. During that (pandemic) time I did do one on Zoom, but it’s not the same as being in the room with your audience. But I won’t lie, it felt more than a little to be out in public again in a social setting.

Removing splinters (known in Scotland as skelfs) from my hands with my X-Pro2 under my chin, on a self timer.

ALL SHOT ON X-PRO2 & 18/2 (28mm full frame)

Eclectic

BY BERT STEPHANI

Sometimes, you just need to pick up the camera and start pressing the shutter button. I’m slowly starting to trust the process. It will always lead to something, even if it’s just knowing that you are on the wrong track.

6:37am - First picture of the day, just after I got up.

2:21am - actually THIS was the first picture of February ;-)

6:46am - Before the rest of the family wakes up, I really enjoy taking a bit of time for a coffee and myself.

I spent pretty much the rest of the day at my desk, like most days in the last 2 years. Nothing special, very little to photograph. I’m ok with it, not for the rest of my life, but at the moment it’s all good.

The biggest event of the day was my son’s 19th birthday. Due to restriction he didn’t really get a proper 18th birthday but we tried to make up for it this year.

I usually try to make a portrait of loved ones on their birthday. Kobe didn’t feel like posing for a portrait, but agreed to a quick silhouette shot.

The next day was another home office day but I went for a little walk around the house at night to make at least some pictures.

An apple a day …

Yesterday was a big photo/video day. I had to shoot an intro video and an interview. And then I had to edit it in time for a webinar at night. And I was also in charge of the whole technical part of a multi camera live broadcast while making promotional pictures. It’s amazing what we can do with today’s technology. I sometimes complain about wearing so many different hats at once but at the same time I find it really exciting what we can do these days. When I started in television 25 years ago, this would have required at least 10 people, 2 trucks of equipment and a crazy budget.

If you look carefully, you can see that I always have KAGE on my mind.

Where am I? Where is this project leading to? I honestly don’t have a clue yet. And at this point, that’s fine with me. I’m just happy to be shooting, being inspired by the collective and seeing great work from you on Instagram.

Chemistry

By Patrick La Roque

I took numerous drugs when I was younger. I’m not bragging. Times were different, the risks were known but more foolishly dismissed. Plus, I was in a band (s), I’d read Huxley and Baudelaire, and various books on tribal rituals typically involving vast amounts of peyote or mushrooms. Both were eventually on the menu. I naively considered myself an explorer, buying into the myth of artist as wildling, forced to the dark, and necessary, outskirts of humanity. I was a dumb kid. I was invincible. 

Most of us made it through unscathed—but most isn’t all. We saw one friend sink into addiction, step by fateful step. We heard the empty promises, and the pleas for cash, just this once, I swear, last time… until nothing was left but a shadow.

Two months ago, I started taking medication to help with long-standing sleep issues. It worked. I even wrote about this glowingly on my blog, waxing poetic about “finding myself” again. But recently, its effects changed. Something was off. So I stopped.

I’d never experienced withdrawal. Despite all the junk I’d pumped into myself for years, my body had never needed any substance to the point of becoming sick once deprived. This week, it did. The medication doesn’t cause addiction, it’s not an opioid, and you don’t find yourself craving it. But clearly, the body reacts when it no longer gets its daily dose. This happens with coffee, so I wasn’t all that surprised. But it took two days for these symptoms to subside, and for me to feel quasi-normal again. Two days of chills and weird headaches and fog and jitters and heart palpitations. Enough to cause concern and start questioning where you’re headed.

Never again.

So this was an odd week to start a new project, but I’m grateful. Because photography is, I think, a form of mind-wandering for me. It’s a physical release valve, very close to the act of daydreaming.

Here’s to small (but essential) moments of wanderlust.

P.S The grid doesn’t allow a 4:5 ratio: click on the images for their actual frame.

Stark, Harsh

Stark, Harsh

Summer in Sydney is a test of how well you can avoid the harsh sun. We haven’t had any days over 40° (yet) here this year, it’s still possible though.

But what I find fascinating about those days when the sun beats down is the absolute starkness of the light, the contrast it creates—and its effect not just on people but the whole environment…

Derek's Letter of Intent

Mechanics cars tend to be in dire need of repair. Who wants to fix their own car after spending all day fixing other peoples cars in the freezing cold of winter?

This is where I find myself. I spend Monday to Friday every week either shooting pictures and video or editing them (all for other people). Weekends are mostly free with the family, but picking up a camera to shoot personal stuff doesn’t enter my mind much these days. Worse than that, the thought of having to edit any personal pictures, after spending too many hours in front of computer screens doesn’t exactly thrill me.

I miss photography for the sheer pleasure of it! I miss the challenges we used to set as a group here at Kage. We always produced when we had deadlines, themes, and quite often limitations. These haven’t been happening for a while now and we have grinded to a halt.

My two favourite cameras (of all time) are the X-Pro2 and the X100V. My favourite lenses to shoot personal work is the Fujicron’s (X-series has always been about small size for me). So my self imposed limitations for this project will be the following:

Week 1 - 28mm (full-frame) using the X-Pro2 & 18/2

Week 2 - 35mm (full-frame) using the X100V (possibly the X100F too)

Week 3 - 50mm (full-frame) using the X-Pro2 & 35/2

Week 4 - 75mm (full-frame) using the X-Pro2 & 50/2

Having just bought a new Nord Wave 2 synthesiser and been blown away by the quality of the sound it can create, I would love to incorporate some music in some way. But this is just hope and at the end of the day, I probably won’t have time. We’ll see.

As for what I will shoot…I have no idea at this point. It might just be a series of random snapshots in the end, but it will be February 2022

Good luck to my fellow Kage members. Good luck to all that are struggling.

Derek Clark

January 30th 2022