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223 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2015
The eye that looks through the lensAs always, what Wenders thinks about art is not just the art itself, nor even the art and the creator, but the art, the creator, and everyone else who might be drawn into community through the ongoing process.
is also reflected on the photo itself. . . .
The heart is the real light-sensitive medium here,
not the film or the digital sensor.
It is the heart that sees an image and wants to capture it.
The eye lets the light in, sure,
which is why we also call it a “lens,”
but it doesn’t “depict the image,”
it doesn’t depict anything.
Nor do the retina or the nerve cords that transmit the information.
The “image” is created “within.”
There, it is matched with many other signals
that are coming in at the same time.
Some of these are related to formal or aesthetic criteria,
like composition, focus and contrast
or to the overall impression and to the details. . . .
There are a thousand signals and messages arriving simultaneously,
all of which have to be processed within a fraction of a second.
The hands are already part of the thought process
as they correct the frame,
the finger already knows what’s coming and presses the shutter button...
What I’m trying to say is:
the photograph that’s just being created
includes all of these thoughts,
processes them as another kind of light, “an inner light,”
depicts them and “contains them” at the same time
that it deals with “the outer light” and the external events,
thus producing next to the objective picture
the invisible portrait of the photographer himself. (113–115)