Thursday, 29 December 2022

Drawing With Light

Kilimanjaro (Gabriel Israel)















"You don't make a photograph just with a camera. You bring to the act of photography all the pictures you have seen, the books you have read, the music you have heard, the people you have loved." 
(Ansel Adams). 

Gabriel Israel is a draughtsman. Like all talented artists his drawing skills are excellent, and appeared early. His chalk drawing of a Rembrandt painting made when he was a teenager illustrates the depth of his technical talent. The same can also be said of his early Michelangelo reproductions. That he describes the act of photography as "light drawing" is therefore not without significance. "That's what I do," Gabriel says. "Drawing with light. For me it's like art. You capture something, like a painting." He knows whereof he speaks.

Rembrandt Chalk Drawing (Gabriel Israel)



















Street Scene, Venice, Italy (Gabriel Israel)












   
The High Renaissance and Dutch Golden Age are conspicuous by their influence in Gabriel's photography (at least by those who know their art history), and provide the artistic basis for his romantically realist philosophy of art. If philosophy begins in wonder (as Aristotle says), then so does photography, at least the kind that Gabriel has perfected through his body of work.

Art can be usefully described as a selective recreation of reality based on an artist's value judgements. The monetary value that collectors have rightly seen in Gabriel's recreations is rooted in his values as an artist. When I asked him to sum up his work in one word Gabriel immediately said "passion." It is the passion beneath, between, and behind Gabriel's photographic acts that makes his pictures not only well worth the taking, but also well worth the partaking in by those of us who are as serious about collecting great art as we are about confronting the reason why it matters.

The philosopher and the photographer do the same thing, but they do it in different ways: they recognize wonder in nature and try to give expression to it, in words and in images. What does this Aristotelian wonder consist in? Gabriel sheds light on the significance of this question by answering it in his drawings. They contain captured moments of absolute clarity. To encounter them is to have the silence of that attentive moment drown out the noise of the attenuating multitude. They help us feel rather than think by respecting and conveying the passion of lived-experience. In Gabriel the philosopher and photographer become one: to truly feel is to truly see. What is the eye that sees but is never itself seen? The answer to this koan is in the seeing (for the soul of the eye is seeing).

Lower Antelope Canyon Crystal Ball (Gabriel Israel)













Gabriel is a romantic. His romance consists in his technical ability to draw us in and make us wonder at the existence of the real world, frame by frame. To illustrate this point, Gabriel showed me a series of pictures he took of the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, Ontario. "They get you thinking," he said. I asked him what he meant. "It's the power of this building," he answered, "the strong diagonal, the metal, the cold of the material." One picture in particular demonstrates what he means by the building's power. "The spiral tower has to be there," he said. "That is reality." He then drew my attention to the reflection in the window of the building. "The reflection looks like a painting." He then fell silent and let the picture do the talking.

Reflecting Dali, Royal Ontario Museum (Gabriel Israel)


















        
Gabriel is disciplined enough to capture light as it draws it's natural patterns, without getting in its way. "My job is to focus on the composition," he said. And like his High Renaissance master, Gabriel is able to envision the "David" in every shot he takes. But it's not as if he does not have an active role to play giving compositional expression to his visions.

Gabriel knows that photography has grown as an art form, in no small measure due to the rise of modern technology. Given his penchant for the technical side of his craft (he has mastered the tools of his trade), it should come as no surprise to find out that Gabriel's background is in engineering.

He earned his BSc degree at the Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Industrial and Management Engineering. Since that time he has honed his technical skills in health care (where he produced the first Picture Archiving and Communicating (PAC) system for the imaging division in hospital operating rooms in Israel), in IT (where he held numerous Director and Vice Presidential roles in large corporations, from financial, client, and technology services to product management), in education (where he taught international professionals in the IT and financial sectors at a top Canadian university, along with his ongoing role as a photography instructor to a small group of talented and dedicated students), and through the creation and maintenance of his own full service IT consultancy company. As an artist he is a living example of Andy Warhol's claim that good art is good business.

This background informs why he champions digital photography, and how technology serves, not hinders, his art. "I think that back in the day, you clicked and that was it. Now, you click, but it is only when you press Save that you are finished." Between the Click and the Save you are able, through programs like Lightroom, to add more shadows and light until you feel your composition is finished.

The issue is not whether to manipulate a photograph. Manipulating a photograph is like drawing a picture. The trick is knowing when to stop. Less is more when it comes to manipulating High Dynamic Range (the ratio of light to dark in a photograph). Like great cooking, so great shooting: keep the essence of the natural ingredients and what they provide to the dish (a pinch of salt, a pinch of shadow). Gabriel has mastered the trick of his trade.

Hawaii Mountain (Gabriel Israel)
















Gabriel is also a realist. It's what forces him to shy away from manipulating a photograph beyond its natural subject matter. This subject matter matters to him. He respects it for a reason. It serves a personal purpose.

Photography begins in wonder, but it does not end there. Gabriel is aware that the wonder that draws you in will have an impact on you. That is the point of great art. It changes lives by inspiring us to live with the same passion and integrity that created it. And I suggest that it is this demand that every person senses when they look at Gabriel 's art with the same amount of passion that produced it. His drawings are personal reminders that creating and collecting art is never shut off from the reality within which both activities take place. 

Collecting Gabriel's art matters because its all in the value (both financial and personal). Gabriel's values as an artist open up the space for us to confront the wonder of existence, the wonder that there is something rather than nothing, to contemplate the fact that we are alive rather than dead, and to create a life worth living in attentive response to the essence he has captured in his photographs.

A clue to what this means (for artist and collector alike) is found in what he finds most valuable in one of his modern influences. While he recognizes Ansel Adams' technical mastery (Gabriel explained to me how Adams produced one of his famous landscape pictures by using a red filter on black and white, which changed the blue into a very dark blue, thereby turning it into a dark grey in contrast with the mountains he shot), for Gabriel this is not what makes Adams so valuable as an artist.

"I love how Ansel Adams was able to get the people in his pictures to do what they did in order for him to get the shot," Gabriel told me. It was Adams' ability to relate to people and integrate them into his work that is the great inspiration. It is the story behind the picture that Gabriel picks up on, and derives inspiration from in turn.

I began this review with a photograph that Gabriel took of Mount Kilimanjaro. There is a story behind this shot. In order to take it Gabriel had to climb Kilimanjaro. This is no small achievement. He told me that it was one of the most, if not the most, significant milestones in his life, but for more reasons than one. Part of the motivation for him was to raise money for the MukiBaum Foundation (an organization that helps children and adults with mental disabilities). Gabriel produced a photobook of his journey and sold it at their annual gala in a silent auction. All of the proceeds of the sale when to the foundation.

"Lady In The Wind", Lower Antelope Canyon (Gabriel Israel)













Apart from Adams, comparisons to Peter Lik and Gerhard Richter come readily to mind. I am thinking not only about the obvious artistic quality of Gabriel's work in relation to theirs. Gabriel is that good. I am also thinking as a collector. Gaby's light drawings are Lik-like in what I call their wall power (they are an interior decorator's dream), and Richter-like in their large-scale and vibrantly hued abstract character. This two-fold likeness makes his photographs very easy to live with.

Abstract Triptych on wall (Gabriel Israel)


   
It takes more than just knowing about a camera's ISO, aperture, and shutter speed that goes into making a great photograph. The camera is merely a translation device for art. Adams was right when he spoke about what the act of photography is really about. You bring to this act all of the pictures you have seen, all of the books you have read, all of the music you have heard, and all of the people you have loved. In the light of Gabriel Israel's passionate drawings, I would add one more thing to Adams' list. Gabriel teaches us that to turn the act of photography into the act of art, an art that is "born as the echo of God's laughter, the art that creates that fascinating imaginative realm where no one owns the truth and everyone has the right to be understood," you must bring to it the most important thing of all: the life you have lived. 

Gabriel Israel


















Sources
Gabriel Israel. Gabriel Israel Photography.
Judd Tully. "The Ascent Of Gerhard Richter." ART + AUCTION. June, 2012.
Milan Kundera. The Art Of The Novel. Grove Press Inc. 1988.

Thursday, 1 December 2022

December 2022




















Thursday December 01, 2022
The 'Tavistock' in
The Tavistock Lectures is
code for 488. 
It is not without note that 
Jung is on St. Pepper's. 

Friday December 02, 2022
Fortunately he's 
not fit for the culture wars.
Like Klinger before
him he invoked section eight
and left the rest to ablate. 

Saturday December 03, 2022
She deliberately 
made herself known so that he 
could fully view her 
through his own rain-soaked lenses. 
How very gorgeous of her.

Sunday December 04, 2022
Unbeknownst to him
he could have used the Advent
calendar this year,
which would have been much better
because of his commitments. 

Monday December 05, 2022
Once again it turns
out that the tricksters are in
ultimate control
of both seasons and systems.
He's just along for the ride. 

Tuesday December 06, 2022
Many years ago
it was made known to him in
no uncertain terms
that the term 'dramarama'
was persona non grata.

Wednesday December 07, 2022
Who knew that you could
learn about economics 
and wit by reading
Stand Still Like The Humingbird?
Miller never disappoints. 

Thursday December 08, 2022
He is a vessel 
for the many-if-any 
personas that dwell 
and periodically swell 
secretly inside of him. 

Friday December 09, 2022
It took time for him 
to realize that their well-formed 
sentences lacked sense. 
He'd rather remain silent
and be taken as a snob. 

Saturday December 10, 2022
Back in the saddle 
in Seattle dealing with 
international 
luxury real estate firms.
He has always had Paris. 

Sunday December 11, 2022
He did not make it
to the twenty-seven year
mark in his marriage.
Five years less was all she wrote. 
At least he has his children. 

Monday December 12, 2022
He’s always been a 
pragmatic objectivist.  
Private irony 
has subtlety supported 
this public utility.

Tuesday December 13, 2022
More than anything
else it's the attentiveness
that matters most here,
despite the naivety
of theology in them. 

Wednesday December 14, 2022
Occasionally 
presenting public lectures: 
a small price to pay 
for permanently being 
an apophatic writer. 

Thursday December 15, 2022
The next thing he knew 
it had been ten years living 
in solitary 
refinement according to 
his own determination.  

Friday December 16, 2022
Realizing that 
he is very Marian 
comes as no surprise 
given his experience 
venerating Our Lady. 

Saturday December 17, 2022
When in doubt, be kind. 
This is especially true 
when you’re certain that 
kindness is conspicuous 
by its absence in the world. 

Sunday December 18, 2022
And then suddenly 
philosophy lost its charm.  
In turn, he gifted
his entire library
to an Oratorian.  

Monday December 19, 2022
They are all the same, 
irrespective of what they 
continue to say. 
Remaining incognito 
is the only way to go. 

Tuesday December 20, 2022
Her beauty, goodness,
and truth continues to move 
him so tenderly,  
especially since she has
her being in God’s Playground.

Wednesday December 21, 2022
The very idea 
of making his daily bread
in Kilar's country
fills him with unspeakable
joy that transcends translation. 

Thursday December 22, 2022
He will make the long
pilgrimage to the holy
Jasna Góra shrine,
kneeling in veneration
before the blessed icon. 

Friday December 23, 2022
After he wrote up
his last quarterly report
for the fiscal year,
he then turned his attention
to the doing of nothing.

Saturday December 24, 2022
This past year taught him
not to succumb to the urge
of purchasing words
that can be received for free.
Doing so soured his plans. 

Sunday December 25, 2022
He can only take
so much socialization
before he begins
to shut up and then shut down.
It has always been this way. 

Monday December 26, 2022
The recent attempts
at retreating, retrieving,
and reconvening
were obviously not well
received given the reprieve.

Tuesday December 27, 2022
Well, that certainly
was one way to end a long
and loyal friendship.
He wished it was otherwise,
but it takes two to relate. 

Wednesday December 28, 2022
It's not Either/Or,
but rather it is Both/And:
Stein and Wittgenstein
combined together produce
a grammatical keychain.

Thursday December 29, 2022
His friend's father died
at the age of ninety-six
yesterday morning. 
Christian anonymity 
provides comfort in mourning. 

Friday December 30, 2022
The jigsaw puzzle 
of so many action films 
is put together
by focusing attention
on what it means to die hard. 

Saturday December 31, 2022
The hermeneutic 
of renewal within the 
continuity 
of tradition remains to 
honor its papal author.