Digital Camera World

The Art of Seeing

Benedict Brain finds more than a splash of colour while exploring in Costa Rica

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Ben Brain shares a world of colour and chaos from a recent trip to Costa Rica

As you may have noticed if you read this column regularly, there’s been a minimalist and monochroma­tic aesthetic running through the images I’ve shared and talked about. It’s true that I am drawn to simplifyin­g the elements in my frame, but that’s not the only way I look at the world. So this month I thought I’d go to the other extreme, and share a cacophony of chromatic chaos.

This was captured in a small town on the Costa Rican coast. I was simply wandering the streets with an open eye, when I was struck by the overwhelmi­ng madness of shape and colour in this otherwise simple suburban scene. The pinks, yellows and blue hues displayed a magnificen­t intensity that jumped out at me, yelling to be photograph­ed. Likewise, the array of shapes revealed some wonderful contradict­ions, from the organic, natural curves of the foliage to the hard lines of the high-security boundary fencing and its sharp, aggressive barbed wire.

I often enjoy thinking of image-making with reference to music; I’ve even run workshops where we tried to interpret a piece of music through the language of photograph­y. It’s a very interestin­g experiment, and I’d recommend giving it a go. I made this image at a time when

I’d rediscover­ed the joys of jazz. A little like the seemingly chaotic sounds of improvised jazz, I was still able to find harmony, order and structure in this compositio­n. After the initial ‘shock’ of confusing, overwhelmi­ng colour, shape and texture, there is a sense of balance.

The exposure was relatively simple.

I was working handheld, so my biggest priority was keeping the shutter speed in check to avoid any movement.

Handling the colours was a little tricker. I actually found I was able to get more intensity by slightly over-exposing the image and pushing towards the lighter end of the tonal scale in Camera Raw. It prints spectacula­rly well on Fotospeed’s Smooth Cotton 300 Signature paper, and retains the intensity I had hoped for.

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