Ponferrada, June 2023.
The magic of the forest
Galicia, June 2023.
When time stops
Galicia, June 2023.
Compostilla Power Plant
Ponferrada, June 2023.
From the video B&W Photography: castles, waterfalls, power plants and old trees.
Salto del Pelgo, I
Ponferrada, June 2023.
From the video B&W Photography: castles, waterfalls, power plants and old trees.
B&W Photography: castles, waterfalls, power plants and old trees
Day trip to the neighbor province of Leon, where I photograph everything I find: from castles to waterfalls, from power plants to old trees.
Morning walk
Galicia, June 2023.
From the video Bike photography on a foggy morning.
Foggy road
Galicia, June 2023.
From the video Bike photography on a foggy morning.
Montana
Glacier National Park, Montana, May 2021.
From the video Photography in East Glacier National Park.
Trillium Lake
Oregon, July 2017.
Game of castles
Guimarães, Portugal, September 2018.
My favorite trio of prime lenses
It took me a while to get there, but I finally have a lineup of prime lenses I love bringing with me on my daily walks. Most of the time, I'll bring my super zoom lens, but these fast primes let me switch things up every once in a while.
Tree on the field
Galicia, June 2023.
Flight
Galicia, June 2023.
Light in the darkness
Galicia, May 2023.
From the video Black & White Photography at the Death Coast, Galicia: Episode 1.
Good work is not enough
Cormac McCarthy died yesterday at the age of 89. According to Wikipedia, McCarthy is "widely regarded as one of the greatest modern American writers".
What I didn't know about him is that after 26 years of writing, none of McCarthy's novels "had sold more than 5,000 hardcover copies". He was labelled the "best unknown novelist in America".
He spent half of his long writing career as a mostly unknown writer. Success did eventually come to McCarthy, though, and only then his early work was appreciated the way it deserved.
The arts, and that includes photography, are not a meritocracy: good work, even outstanding work, is not a guarantee of success.
Another lesson we can take from his example and many similar others is that success is a lagging indicator. The same goes for failure, by the way.
We do not become what we are today overnight; it's only after weeks, months, years, decades, of hard work (or the lack of) that we achieve results (or not). It took McCarthy 26 years of dedication, of not giving up, to get significant recognition.
At the same time, in order to survive for that long, we should not make that kind of success our end goal. Would you be able to yearn for public recognition for a quarter of a century and still find the strength to keep going? I know I would not, I would've given up.
It's only when we find joy in what we do, and when we set our own definition of success, what that looks like for us, that we have a chance to succeed. And even if that never comes, at least we have poured our souls into our work and shared it with whoever was there to listen to us.
Waiting for the bus
Galicia, June 2023.
Gated tree
Galicia, June 2023.
The stare
Galicia, June 2023.
From the video Bike photography on a foggy morning.
Bike photography on a foggy morning
Another foggy day, a different approach. This time, I take my bike to cover my ground while still having the flexibility to stop anywhere to make an image.