Friday, January 4, 2013

The Mind’s Eye (3 Photos)

The Mind’s Eye (3 Photos)

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© Damian Heinisch

Damian Heinisch was one of 20 photographers invited by the Norwegian Association of the Blind and Partially Sighted to interpret visual defects for a traveling exhibition. Photographing glass houses from inside and out, Heinisch created a series representing Diabetes Retinopati, a condition that leaves blind spots on the retina of the eye. The brain effectively fills in the blind spots by interpolating the visible scene.

“I found that fascinating since I saw parallels to digital work in photo post-production,” Heinisch says. “People with eye diseases can easily get into [socially] difficult situations and be misunderstood” because they often seem to be overlooking details, or looking in the wrong direction. “This can lead to tension between [people] in situations or conversations,” Heinisch notes.

“I tried to reflect that tension using a glass house as a symbol: the perspective out of the glass house represents the viewpoint of someone with an eye defect, while a person with healthy eyes looks into the glass house and sees a mystical dark room with unidentified objects.”

Heinisch is based in Oslo. More of his work can be seen at damianheinisch.org

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This entry was posted on Friday, January 4th, 2013 at 12:00 pm ET by Amber Terranova and is filed under Conceptual, Fine Art, Uncategorized.


Source : pdnphotooftheday[dot]com

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