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Book Description

A deeper look at the creativity, art, expression, craft, and philosophy of landscape photography.

More Than a Rock, 2nd Edition is a passionate and personal book about creativity and expression. In this series of over 70 brief essays, photographer and teacher Guy Tal shares his thoughts and experiences as an artist who seeks to express more in his images than the mere appearance of the subject portrayed. Following up on the success of the first edition, this revised edition contains updated imagery, a new essay in each of the book’s four sections—Art, Craft, Experiences, and Meditations—and is presented in a beautiful hardcover format.

Tal makes an argument to consider creative landscape photography—expressing something of the photographer's conception through the use of natural aesthetics—as a form of visual art that is distinct from the mere representation of beautiful natural scenes. Tal covers topics such as the art of photography, approaches to landscape photography, and the experiences of a working photographic artist. His essays also include reflections on nature and man’s place in it, living a meaningful life, and living as an artist in today’s world.

The book is decidedly non-technical and focuses on philosophy, nature, and visual expression. It was written for those photographers with a passion and interest in creative photography. Anyone who is pursuing their work as art, is in need of inspiration, or is interested in the writings of a full-time working photographic artist will benefit from reading this book. The book is visually punctuated with Tal’s inspiring and breathtaking photography.

“Some images look like things, while others feel like things; some images are of things, while others are about things. A creative image is not a record of a scene nor a substitute for a real experience. Rather, it is an experience in itself—an aesthetic experience—something new that the artist has given the world, rather than a contrived view of something that already existed independent of them.”
—Guy Tal

“The medium of photography has a long tradition of practitioners who were not only masterful photographers, but were also insightful and thoughtful writers—the thinking man’s photographers. Among them we find such greats as John Szarkowski, Minor White, Bill Jay, and Robert Adams. It is no exaggeration to include Guy Tal on this esteemed list.”
— From the Foreword, by Chuck Kimmerle

Table of Contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Dedication
  5. Table of Contents
  6. Foreword by Chuck Kimmerle
  7. Preface
  8. Introduction to the Second Edition
  9. Part I Art
    1. 1 The Mission of Art
    2. 2 My Audience
    3. 3 Difficult Questions
    4. 4 Art and Philosophy
    5. 5 The Things Themselves
    6. 6 Driving Miss Camera
    7. 7 The Phase of No Emotion
    8. 8 Lie Like You Mean It
    9. 9 The Meaning of Words
    10. 10 No Lesser an Art
    11. 11 Art and Rebellion
    12. 12 What Is Real
    13. 13 The Educated Audience
    14. 14 The Medium Is Not the Message
    15. 15 Contemporary Oligarchy
    16. 16 Art for People’s Sake
    17. 17 The Important Thing
    18. 18 What Makes an Artist
    19. 19 On Subjectivity
    20. 20 The Mythical Personal Style
    21. 21 Such Things Could Be
    22. 22 Where Credit Is Due
    23. 23 Shock and Awe
    24. 24 Artistic Promiscuity
  10. Part II Craft
    1. 25 Perfectly Dead Things
    2. 26 Finding the Needle
    3. 27 Forget Vision
    4. 28 Projects and Explorations
    5. 29 Of and About
    6. 30 On Art and Writing
    7. 31 Rethinking Visualization
    8. 32 Composition Means Nothing
    9. 33 Creative Blocks
    10. 34 The Missing Dimensions
    11. 35 The Concept
    12. 36 Breadth and Depth
    13. 37 Isolation
    14. 38 The Velvet Handcuffs of Predictability
    15. 39 Abstractions
    16. 40 Invisible Gorillas
    17. 41 To See as Beautiful
  11. Part III Experiences
    1. 42 End-of-Season Reflections
    2. 43 What Is Enough
    3. 44 Wilderness and Me
    4. 45 Coming Home
    5. 46 A Measure of Worth
    6. 47 Small Joys
    7. 48 Early Spring Meanderings
    8. 49 Living the Life
    9. 50 Listening to the Stories
    10. 51 Working from Home
    11. 52 The Image and the Experience
    12. 53 Solastalgia
    13. 54 Canyon Time
    14. 55 A Matter of Perspective
  12. Part IV Meditations
    1. 56 Big Thoughts
    2. 57 Heaven and Hell
    3. 58 The Meaning of Meaning
    4. 59 On Significance
    5. 60 The Art and the Life
    6. 61 Know This
    7. 62 Photography and the Creative Life
    8. 63 Stories of My Generation
    9. 64 The Wonderful Lightness of Being
    10. 65 The Problem with Moments
    11. 66 Attention Overload
    12. 67 Aboutness
    13. 68 Experience, Uninterrupted
    14. 69 The Abyss Is Always There
    15. 70 Politicizing Art
    16. 71 Meditations on Art, Work, and Solace
    17. 72 Reentry
    18. 73 Photographing Rocks
  13. About the Author
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