Tag: <span>ambiguity</span>

Scotts Bay, Nova Scotia, 2019, signs,
Scotts Bay, Nova Scotia, 2019 – © Avard Woolaver

Signs are everywhere. They can give us important information or directions, but can also be used to make visual jokes–like wordplay, except with images.

These photos were taken this year, some of them over the past month. They are meant to show the ambiguity and humour of signs.

Chester, Nova Scotia, 2019, signs,
Chester, Nova Scotia, 2019 – © Avard Woolaver
Newport, Nova Scotia, 2019 – © Avard Woolaver
Blomidon, Nova Scotia, 2019, signs,
Blomidon, Nova Scotia, 2019 – © Avard Woolaver
Coldbrook, Nova Scotia, 2019, signs,
Coldbrook, Nova Scotia, 2019 – © Avard Woolaver
Newport, Nova Scotia, 2019 – © Avard Woolaver
Scotch Village, Nova Scotia, 2019 – © Avard Woolaver
Blomidon, Nova Scotia, 2019, signs
Blomidon, Nova Scotia, 2019 – © Avard Woolaver
Windsor, Nova Scotia, 2019 – © Avard Woolaver

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Windsor, Nova Scotia, Wish you Were Here, unusual, surrealism,
Windsor, Nova Scotia, 2019 – © Avard Woolaver

When I take a walk with my camera, I’m always on the lookout for the unusual–odd scenes, quirky juxtapositions. To me unusual things are more visually interesting. They demand our attention in different ways than traditional beauty does.

Do you remember those unforgettable Hipgnosis album covers? If you are around my age, you probably spent a lot of time in your teenage years listening to LPs and studying the album covers. You would play side one, then flip over to side two, all the while contemplating the meaning of the prism on the cover. The album art was often straightforward–an attractive portrait of the singer or band. But sometimes it was surreal and enigmatic–very artsy, and unusual.

When I got a camera some years later I remembered those cool Hipgnosis creations (by Storm Thorgerson) and looked for photos with similar moods and juxtapositions. A discarded door on a sidewalk, an odd reflection in a mirror, a blank sign–this lead me to produce a series titled: Wish You Were HereThorgerson was good at isolating odd elements in the image, much like the painter René Magritte. It was clear what you were supposed to notice, but an intended meaning was not so clear. This ambiguity can draw you in and keep you looking for a long time.

Wish You Were Here is available through Blurb Books .

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