Industrial

Natural Gas Processing Plant
Natural Gas Processing Plant
One of the most important commodities in our post industrial world is fossil energy. Few of us understand the scale of the exploitation of petroleum resources. We hear reports of millions or billions of barrels but those numbers have little meaning. They are just an abstractions to us.

The giant infrastructure required to feed our appetite for energy is largely unseen. We know about refineries, pipelines and the like. We don’t often think of the massive efforts required keep energy flowing from source to consumer. The energy beast operates nonstop forever but not without tens of thousands of people to make it function.

Going to places where oil and gas are extracted provides some perspective of our efforts to power the world. Land in the oil patch is dotted with wells and pumps sipping away at the earth. These in turn are aggregated into streams and torrents of raw product. There is a direct relationship between the world economy and people at the point of production. When demand is high there is work when demand is low no work. Human effort per barrel is a calculation worth considering.

Hand Wheels
Hand Wheels

Fresh Frozen Reality

Rock Shelter Petroglyph
Rock Shelter Petroglyph
Lately photo web sites are abuzz with indignation over dastardly manipulation of images. Indeed, how could anyone do such a thing as corrupt the truth in a photograph? A better question is how can a photo represent reliable truth? The general notion persists that photographs represent reality. We are so easily deceived into thinking they are true depictions of something. Even if you discount all the decisions and or biases of the photographer you are only left with a fraction of a second of frozen ‘reality’. Anything we know from a photographic image has been interpreted, composed and extracted by the photographer then reinterpreted, recomposed and committed to memory.

I wonder what truth was being represented hundreds of years ago by the maker of the rock shelter petroglyph? That person didn’t have a camera but he did have a world view which framed his interpretation of reality as surely as we frame our own. Native peoples were as intelligent as us and just as capable of depicting the world using the technology available to them. You can easily see that they had cultural bias. Should we think that we are less biased because we have a better way to portray detail in our images?

It is good to remember that 99.99% of all photographs are not made for evidentiary documentary purposes. We are free to select what we see in front of our camera lenses and to interpret the images we capture. The fraction of a percent of images that we deem to be inviolable as historical documents are an edge case when compared to the mountain of images made for other purposes.

The camera is an instrument for capturing light not truth. The finished photo is something interpreted before and after capture. It is important that we set our own limits for what is appropriate when creating finished images. Others should be free to do the same thing.

Mortar and Rock Window
Mortar and Rock Window