This picture compels an instant question: What is going on?
To stay oriented we must find reference points. If we cannot we go "crazy."
When we wake we must figure out where we are. That is why we frequently forget our dreams.
This phenomenon can lead to a practice that is discouraging to artists. When most people identify the contents of a canvas they turn away.
Once I share the circumstances of this photograph you may think, "Oh, I see" & move on. The artist's dismay is that you miss whatever else a picture has to offer.
What about the intellectual questions: shape, shadow, form & light? What feelings are provoked?
Life pushes speed. Our cell phones hold thousands of snap shots & we make snap judgements hundreds of times a day.
The radiologist spots the break in the x-ray. The nurse technician reads a temperature. A Vice President determines the CEO's mood with a glance.
These are important decisions. But, art has no "function." By turning away from images too quickly we regularly miss the best life offers. How does light land in your days & nights? What if you linger longer in another's eyes? What would you notice in the second viewing of a movie?
The best way to "see" is to engage your sacred heart. Speed is not a part of meaningful encounters.
-Erie Chapman
Photograph by Erie. The hands are a dry cleaning store mannequin's. Everything else is a reflection.

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