Why Light Is My Subject in Photography

Why Light Is My Subject in Photography

What’s poppin, people? It’s Dante. The world is so open.
There’s so much to do, to see, to explore, and to photograph.
I mean, it is such an abundantly beautiful world out here.

Check out the beautiful view of the Fairmount Water Works — standing atop the cliff, catching that sunset. Seems like there’s a wedding. Yeah.


Light Is My Subject

Today I’m thinking about light — and why I treat light as my subject in photography, and what this means to me.

“Photography — photo meaning light, graphé meaning writing or drawing — is the act of writing with light.”

When I’m out here with my camera, I treat each frame like an instant sketch of light itself. And that’s a very empowering thought.

Because no matter where I am, no matter what I see —
the photograph I make will never be the same.
Light is always changing. It’s always in flux,
like the river flowing endlessly in the Schuylkill.


Same Path, Different Light

I can walk the same lane, follow the same path,
stand at the same vantage point,
look at my shadow at the same time of day — over and over again.
And still make something new.

There’s something so beautiful about recognizing change through light.

“Photography becomes a search for truth through light itself.”


Not Reality — Abstraction

When I’m making photographs, I’m not trying to depict reality.
I’m abstracting it.

Light becomes not only the subject — but also the medium.

When light casts upon surfaces, when it emanates through my lens,
touches the sensor and forms an image — it’s a beautiful lie.
It’s not showing life as it truly is.

Looking at my shadow down there —
that’s actually really beautiful. I’m gonna make a photo of that.

“Photographs are like casting shadows on the wall.”

It’s not reality — it’s an abstraction of it.
And when I shoot in high-contrast black and white,
with the contrast settings cranked to the absolute max —
it’s like I’ve got x-ray vision, looking beyond the veil.


Evoking Feeling, Not Stories

I’m not trying to capture a moment or a story.
I’m trying to evoke what it feels like to exist.

“I want to make a photograph that evokes a sensual, emotional experience for the viewer.”

Using light as my subject and medium is a return to the essence of photography.

And by doing that —
maybe I’m also chipping away at life,
and revealing the eternal forms of beauty itself.


I Follow the Sun

I literally orient myself toward the sun.
I don’t have a plan. No preconceived notion of what I’ll find.
I just follow the light.

  • The way it casts across a bench
  • The shadows on the floor
  • The glow of leaves held up to sunlight
  • The macro details of nature
  • The vastness of trees
  • The humanity of people

All of it — touched by light.

Photography becomes meditation
a practice of presence, a spark of bliss.


Light Heals and Creates

Sunlight kisses the skin.
Vitamin D, UV rays — they awaken the body.
They synthesize hormones, make me feel strong.

While I’m photographing, I’m affirming life.

“There’s this feeling you get when you create something — it’s godlike.”

Light created the universe. Light created me.
So when I return to nature — to trees, to birds, to pinecones —
I’m reminded:

“God is within everything. Everything that light touches bears God’s divine signature.”


The Soul in Others

Look into someone’s eyes — and you see their soul.
There’s a light within us all.

“When you recognize the light within another person, it charges your soul like a tuning fork striking the heart.”

And when you see someone else as a divine creation,
you feel an overwhelming love for humanity
for flowers, animals, people, plants, everything.

Following light brings you back to this:
a reverence for the essence of all things.


Eternal Light

No, maybe we can’t live forever.
But a photograph? A photograph might.

“When I photograph, I hope to evoke my soul in the image. If the soul dies when we die — then maybe we can live forever through the act of creation.”

So keep walking.
Follow the straight and narrow path.
Follow the light.


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