Musée Magazine Issue No. 17 - Enigma | Page 12

SALLY: Totally. One hundred percent. We have a bun- galow in Italy where we’ve been spending summers for a while now and every year we try and go on an Italian adventure somewhere we have not been. My husband wanted to go to Sicily, so we decided to do a three-week journey driving around the entire Island. I didn’t have a notion of photographing anything specific; it was a cultural trip. One day we were in Syracuse, sightseeing in the old town. It was a beautiful afternoon and I wan- dered around with my camera just looking. I was walk- ing through the super narrow streets, and as I’m admir- ing the ornate architecture around me, I keep seeing all this flapping color overhead. Without really focusing on it, I kept thinking, what is all that colorful move- ment? I had a point and shoot camera so I took some very casual pictures, and continued my way. When I came back to New York and looked at those pictures, I thought, “what is that?” And I liked it so much that I kept talking to my husband about it and he said, “May- be you ought just to go right back there, literally get on a plane and go back to Syracuse”. So I did. I shot the initiating “snapshots” when we were in Sicily in Sep- tember and in February I went back to Sicily for two weeks, to the same exact location where I’d taken those first pictures, and thus the project began. I didn’t plan this body of work ahead of time at all. If I hadn’t taken a walk on that afternoon, on that particular day, I never would have done this project. I only realized in going back and trying to reshoot it, that the day on which I made those first “snapshots”, I had the perfect condi- tions, a stiff wind and an incredibly blue sky on a mas- sively bright day. If I hadn’t had that particular weather on that particular day, I would have never made those few snapshots, thus I would have never made this body of work. (And so began my frustration of trying to rep- licate that day which was very hard to do since I can’t plan the weather! Nor can I plan when people hang their clothing out to dry, particularly their “interesting” clothing). Aerial started by the fortuitous accidental seeing of something compelling – as opposed to having a concept or idea ahead of time . . and being able to take a journey with the seeing. STEVE: How does serendipity play into your process? SALLY: What I love about photography is the act of dis- covery and with interacting with the physical world. I like wandering around looking and discovering. I could never be a painter in a studio, as much as I love paint- ing. And I could never work like so many photographers work today on conceptual projects that are created with Photoshop, manipulating images or using existing imagery. 10