Abstraction Is the Secret to Never Burning Out in Photography

Abstraction Is the Secret to Never Burning Out in Photography

What’s poppin’, people? It’s Dante.

Today I want to share with you some thoughts about abstraction in photography—and why this is the ultimate solution for finding something out there in the mundane nature of life.

The Mundane Becomes Infinite

With abstraction, you now have the ability to articulate things in a thousand million bajillion different ways.

The mundane nature of life becomes infinitely fascinating when your own personal, subjective interpretation of reality reveals itself through what the camera sees.

By photographing with a streamlined workflow—Ricoh high contrast JPEGs, automatic settings—I can push the boundaries of what my camera sees by stripping away all the superfluous technicalities.

Light Is Everything

When I think about photography, I think about light.

Light is the essence of the medium. It’s what gives shape and form to everything around us.

And when you focus on that one simple thing—light itself—everything becomes fascinating:

  • Macro details
  • Micro textures
  • Grand landscapes

Everything.

Stop Waiting for the World

Through abstracting reality, I’ve found infinite ways to return to photography every single day—regardless of where I am or what’s in front of me.

Because it’s no longer about the world delivering something interesting.

It’s about:

  • Your curiosity
  • Your imagination
  • Your playful, childlike spirit

That’s what creates the photograph.

The Cure for Burnout

If you’ve ever felt burned out, or like there’s nothing to shoot—abstraction is the solution.

Ever since adopting this way of seeing:

  • I’ve become more prolific than ever
  • I’m making more frames than I ever have
  • I’m finding novelty in everything

It completely reorients your brain.

Strip It All Down

There’s so much decision fatigue in photography:

  • Cameras
  • Lenses
  • Settings
  • Styles

But when you strip everything down to:

  • Light
  • Shadow
  • Instinct
  • Abstraction

You start to create again.

A Frictionless Practice

What I want is longevity.

I want a practice that allows me to photograph endlessly without burning out.

So I’ve made everything as frictionless as possible:

  • Automatic settings
  • Processing baked into the file
  • No overthinking

Now photography is just integrated into my daily life.

I’m no longer hunting or chasing.

I’m just letting curiosity guide me.

Let the Camera Surprise You

The real magic is remembering:

It’s the camera that interprets reality.

The surprises, the imperfections, the serendipity—those are the things that keep me going.

When I shoot:

  • High contrast
  • Maximum grit and grain
  • Loose snapshots

I’m not taking it seriously.

And when I review my photos at night, there’s always a surprise waiting for me.

That surprise is what keeps me out there.

Everything Is Interesting Now

I’m no longer dependent on external circumstances.

I don’t need a “good location.”

A parking lot becomes fascinating:

  • Light hitting cars
  • Reflections on surfaces
  • Textures on the ground

Clouds, shadows, random details—everything becomes material.

Beyond Street Photography

Street photography got me into this.

But abstraction freed me from it.

I’m no longer boxed into definitions.

I’m just photographing.

And because of that—I’m shooting more, and I’m shooting differently.

The Snapshot Philosophy

The snapshot isn’t just a technique.

It’s a philosophy.

It’s a way of operating:

  • Shoot loosely
  • Don’t define things
  • Don’t chase outcomes

Just stay curious.

What will reality manifest as today in a photograph?

Final Thought

Go out there and play.

Explore your own subjective way of seeing.

Take the most ordinary thing—and lift it into something extraordinary.

That’s abstraction.

And that’s where the joy comes back.


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