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Harold Jones
Coles
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Harold Jones in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $108.50

Coles
Harold Jones in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $108.50
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Size: Hardcover
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Harold Jones's photography is difficult to categorize, and there are no generalizations that satisfactorily describe his varied body of work. His original training in painting and photography led to a practice that Jones referred to as "photodrawings" – gelatin silver prints worked with a variety of hand-colored surfaces. The resulting images are unique and cannot be duplicated. Jones' approach has varied within his unaltered prints as well. He has worked with both multiple andlong-duration exposures to capture motion. Jones's subjects are everyday objects arranged in compositions that require viewing and re-viewing. The photographer has described his delight in the process in which a person moves beyond a superficial reading of his work for closer inspection. His images reinforce the idea that a world continues beyond the picture plane; that one is seeing a fragment of a larger whole. Although he often photographs mundane objects, such as a water tower or laundryhanging, his unusual vantage points or unexpected cropping, produce a range of effects from humor to mystery.
Harold Jones's photography is difficult to categorize, and there are no generalizations that satisfactorily describe his varied body of work. His original training in painting and photography led to a practice that Jones referred to as "photodrawings" – gelatin silver prints worked with a variety of hand-colored surfaces. The resulting images are unique and cannot be duplicated. Jones' approach has varied within his unaltered prints as well. He has worked with both multiple andlong-duration exposures to capture motion. Jones's subjects are everyday objects arranged in compositions that require viewing and re-viewing. The photographer has described his delight in the process in which a person moves beyond a superficial reading of his work for closer inspection. His images reinforce the idea that a world continues beyond the picture plane; that one is seeing a fragment of a larger whole. Although he often photographs mundane objects, such as a water tower or laundryhanging, his unusual vantage points or unexpected cropping, produce a range of effects from humor to mystery.


















