Some researchers have noticed a great tendency among Synesthetes
to personify fonts as well as other objects. I certainly share that
trait as is evident in the titles of my work. My titles are the words
that pop into my head when I look at images after I take them.
Interestingly, those words never change. I can pick up a photo I
haven't seen in ten years, and a title will pop into my head as if for
the first time; only when I turn it over, I see that I wrote the exact
same thing ten years before. It is unfailing and uncanny and true. The
personification that pops into my head remains the same over time.
All of the houses I photograph in reflection look like people to me.
Actually, they ARE people to me: windows are eyes; bridges are mouths,
lights on water become dancers. Yet, my personifications are not
self-conscious metaphors. Rather, they represent what I feel before I
have time to think or correct my initial perception to match it to what
other people take for granted. Secondarily, I know that I am
photographing houses, not people. My tendency to personify inanimate
objects is not limited to reflections or houses -- I pretty much do it
with everything I look at including fonts on a page, which take on
gender and personality.
In addition, there is a highly personal aspect to the personification
process that creates an unusual collection of self-portraits for me.
Different houses that I photograph represent different states of
consciousness and unconsciousness that I travel into and out during my
process. I watch changing patterns on moving water until the pattern
takes on a form that matches what I feel; then, I shoot The image I
bring home is a portrait of me or of how I felt when I snapped: I
photograph my emotions. For more examples, please visit my galleries "Personification" and "Shapes I Become."