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'Integral Lens' project series & collections
Click on thumbnail to view each collection's full gallery.
Archive: 9
collections - 382 images, updated January 2023.

Forward to Integral Lens
by professor Mark DeKay

Pygmalion Karatzas has been on a journey. My wife, Susanne, and I have had the pleasure of both watching from afar as his visual reports arrived daily, and for some weeks sharing and celebrating with Pygmalion in Knoxville. These images are the journal of an exploration of the American continent and of an inner journey of man, architect and photographer. 

 

Pygmalion moves fast and shoots slowly. He is constantly in motion, a blur of planning and execution, shooting more images and visiting more buildings than most architects do in a lifetime. But each image is not snapped in infinitesimal automated digital time. Each is carefully composed and shot in long-exposures of minutes’ duration using a 10X neutral density filter to reduce the incoming light.

 

Integral Lens, volume 1, in its 150 selected images, shows both impeccable accomplishment and a continual spirit of beginning. Pygmalion and I share an interest in Integral Theory and his journey through this Fulbright experience has in part been driven by the question, “What is Integral Architectural Photography?” Writing now six weeks after his return to Greece, I am still living into that question. A fuller exploration of the ideas and perspectives embedded in the question of Integral Photography follows in later essays and papers. For now, consider that an integrally-informed photography is multi-perspectival and views the phenomena of both architecture and photography from the standpoint of Self, Culture and Nature. The integral photographer can inhabit all of these, shifting from an aesthetic perspective, to a symbolic interpretation, to an empirical and calculated view of its subjects.

 

By the perspective of Self, we mean the subjective sense of one’s perception and intentions. Our most basic relationship to a photograph is visual.  These images manifest a photographic “aesthetic eye” that is immediately discernable. When people see these images, they often respond with visceral sounds or gasps from the visual impact. The origin, one might speculate, of the power that Integral Lens manifests begins with that choice of subject, perspective and framing that has always characterized photography and any two-dimensional representational media.  

 

By the perspective of Culture, we mean the cultural context of interpretation and our shared meanings. In both his “editorial” and “artistic” approaches, Pygmalion is aware of the history of his craft. Both kinds of work carry meanings, whether a commentary on the contemporary American city in an urban waterscape or the impact of a recent building in an editorial image. While he is reluctant to limit the viewer’s right to interpretation, his methods consciously generate new contexts that facilitate sustained inquiry into interpreting the built and natural environments. 

 

By the perspective of Nature, we mean the objective world in both its mechanics and its complexity. Here we find a master of mobile, professional, long-exposure photographic technique and of contemporary digital post-processing in Photoshop and Light Room. The end results are an integration of inspired artistic vision and carefully studied craft with skills born of countless hours. In terms of the complexity of exteriors, his is a work embedded in the social and economic contexts of our time, from online and digital publication to various forms of social media, magazines and journals. The Integral Lens has behind the images a network of associations with other photographers, architects, galleries, critics, friends, family and thinkers. One can only stand amazed at the socio-economic ecosystems that have supported such vast productivity.  

 

Another dimension to an integral understanding of photography can be revealed by considering the photographer, the photograph and its subject, and the viewing of the photograph.The photographs themselves take a range of subjects, both city and nature, buildings and contexts, interiors and exteriors, wholes and parts, full of people and empty of habitation, frozen structures and dynamic skies—cityscapes, urban waterscapes and wild landscapes. The wide-angle Karatzas lens ranges widely. In his framing, you will find the conventional perspective, and the unconventional, such as the fully vertical view and the vertical panorama shot—along with an unapologetic embrace of the modern and post-modern taboo on symmetry. And how such symmetry still touches us deeply!

 

Pygmalion’s combination of wide-angle lens, detailed full-frame digital SLR camera, long exposure and high-resolution RAW format post-processing combine to have the effect of capturing a larger perspective, both geometrically and in time than we are used to seeing.  The image takes a view that would require one in person to pivot one’s head, to “zoom” one’s focus from detail to a whole scene, and to simply stay put and observe what changes and what does not. The collapsing of time and space like this within a two-dimensional image is for me a source of contemplation and a lesson about the limits of what we think we see.

 

The photographer holds intentions in producing the work, along with a personal interpretation of the building or landscape. In making the photograph, the artist creates from a state and stage of consciousness. I suggest that the reader consider that part of what is conveyed when viewing the photographs of Integral Lens, is the potential to enter into or at least glimpse the awareness that created it. If integral consciousness is “aperspectival” (meaning beyond individual perspectives), as Jean Gebser put it, then something of this lens is available to viewers of this work. Although filled with page-turning anticipation about what comes next, this is not work to be glanced over as a coffee-table fashion book. I encourage you to take a long-exposure view of each image. Let the Integral Lens take you somewhere.      

Professor Mark DeKay 

author, Integral Sustainable Design: transformative perspectives

Knoxville, Tennessee, April 2016    

INTEGRAL LENS DIGITAL EXHIBIT

by Pygmalion Karatzas and Mark DeKay.

Presented at the Integral European Conference, Integral Art track, May 2020.

Introduction to Integral Lens book compilations
by Pygmalion Karatzas

“When I first looked at Walker Evans’ photographs, I thought of something Malraux wrote: ‘To transform destiny into awareness.’ One is embarrassed to want so much for oneself. But, how else are you going to justify your failure and your effort?” – Robert Frank

I first learned about the Fulbright Artist Scholarships when I interviewed architect and photographer Yiorgis Yerolymbos for a feature of his work for the Danish Architecture Center in 2014. As I researched his work, I saw that he had done a photographic road trip in the U.S. as a Fulbright Scholar and during our interview I also read his Ph.D. thesis on the New Topographics movement, which was a new photographic perspective for me. At the time I was shifting from my 12-year architecture practice to a new career in photography, focusing on editorial and artistic architectural photography. In a period of about three years and a steep learning curve as a self-taught photographer, I was fortunate to produce a new body of work with limited means, from two trips to Europe and Qatar, and with those portfolios to receive multiple awards in international photography competitions. Since I wanted to continue practicing both personal work and commissions, the financing of the former required external support of some kind, so photography grants became an option worth pursuing.  

 

The Fulbright application process is lengthy, but in retrospect I got to understand and appreciate the reasons and functions of such a process. From the autumn of 2014 when the application process started, till the spring of 2015 when the Scholarships were announced, it was a part-time job for to prepare for this trip. The integral approach of American philosopher Ken Wilber has been a deeply influential school of thought for me since I discovered it in 2001. After studying it extensively and applying it to personal and professional aspects of my life, I felt it was a fitting opportunity to implement it to the framing of the proposed project. The ‘four quadrants’ take into consideration the interior and exterior aspects of both the individual and the collective perspectives of an investigated phenomenon, in order to provide a comprehensive study that respects all available dimensions in a non-reductionistic manner. In the case of architectural photography, a practical interpretation meant: architects, photographers, artists owners, builders (UL quadrant); buildings, cityscapes, landscapes, suburban areas, the man-altered landscape, terrain vague (UR quadrant); styles and worldviews, relationships, communication and presentation, interviews, research (LL quadrant); modes of production and distribution, technological advancements, institutions and organisations, resource management, networks (LR quadrant). Prof. Mark DeKay, author of the book ‘Integral Sustainable Design’ was the sponsor and the University of Tennessee Knoxville the affiliated institution. The itinerary from October 2015 to March 2016 covered the following cities: Knoxville, New York, Boston & Cambridge, Chicago, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Santa Barbara, Big Sur & Monterey Bay, San Francisco, Seattle, Denver, Miami, New Orleans, and ending back to Knoxville, staying in each location from two to four weeks. 

 

After an initial research for each location, examples of modern and contemporary architecture were selected and mapped out. Each day as many of them as possible were visited for commercial style photo-shoots and, in parallel, the areas near them - as well as other areas of interest - were also explored with long exposure photography and time-lapse videography. In this manner, both the fast-paced editorial approach and the slow artistic experimentation and exploration were utilised. Different points of view were used to suggest the pluralistic worldview but at the same time an emphasis was given to minimalist and uncluttered compositions that serve as a unifying underscore. The photo-shoots required a heightened coordinations of multiple faculties: managing of time and resources, continuous adaptation to new conditions, logistical issues of accessibility and permissions, 15-20 thousand steps of walking with heavy gear per day, to name a few. The photo-walks and selection of locations were based on thematic groups already established but also on exploring and experimenting with new ones. 

 

For the editorial subjects, hundreds of images per building were taken. The initial selection narrowed them down to 30-40 and from those about 15-20 images were selected for post-processing. A natural high dynamic range editing reveals both highlights and shadows of the raw file which then is further processed in selective areas within the frame to add presence, depth and complementary lighting. The final images are then sequenced to narrate the project from context to frontal portraits to details, from exterior to interior, from daytime to dusk, with people and movement or unobstructed. For the artistic subjects, the process was not as straightforward. In locations that are visited and photographed daily by thousands of people, the challenge of creating something unique and memorable lies in giving enough time, being patient, thoroughly exploring the space, but also in the post-processing choices in the digital darkroom. The discussions, meetings and photo-walks that took place during the visits also fed into the on-going process.    

 

The scale and scope of this project was such that the final images are meant to be viewed and used in different ways. Some sets can portray single buildings, some images can stand as individual aesthetic experiences, other images can be grouped based on their subject matter or motif, others explore urban conditions for their diversity or commonality. For this publication, images were grouped in seven series progressing in scale from the micro (details of buildings) to the macro (cityscapes). They alternate between representational and expressionistic, with some intentionally blurring the distinctions.  

Even though experiencing a place for the first time with fresh eyes can be advantageous to a creative person (photographer and architect alike), the deeper memories, knowledge and connections locals have with their natural and man-made habitat over extended periods of time can be equally beneficial and inspirational. For this reason I feel very fortunate to have been hosted by locals in most of the visited cities. Being part of their daily lives while doing this project, gave me an invaluable opportunity to glimpse each location through their eyes, to have a heart-felt connection with their microcosm, and at moments, to really feel part of their élan vital. 

During this 5-month trip, approximately 9,600 miles were traveled by plane, 4,200 miles by car, 1,300 miles by public commuting, and 750,000 steps walking. In total about 12,000 still images were taken from 150 buildings and locations, 65,000 images in time-lapse video, 20 meetings and interviews, and 300 hours in post-processing and editing. A lecture on editorial and artistic architectural photography, and two workshops on the aspects of architectural photography were given at the College of Architecture and Design of the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, and two video presentations were submitted at the ESW architecture conference in Athens. These “marathon-like” figures reflect the author’s eagerness to seize an opportunity of a life time, and his continuous admiration for architecture and iconography. 

 

‘Integral Lens’ is a photographic vision aiming to combine a respectful representation of exterior realities with a meaningful expression of our interiority. Choosing iconic buildings as well as conventional structures and cityscapes we come across daily, is intended to share my enthusiasm for design and aesthetics, to contemplate on man’s symbiotic relationship with the material, and ultimately to trigger a more inspirational and uplifting sense for the built environment. This open-ended journey started twenty years ago with my architectural and urban design studies, spend twelve of them practicing architectural design and construction, and the last three shifting to commercial and artistic photography.   

 

Integral photography starts with an integrally informed photographer.  Wilber’s integral map is designed to be applied in different fields. For example, the ‘Five levels of sustainable design aesthetics’ by prof. Mark DeKay can also apply to architectural photography. The four essential dimensions (‘4 quadrants’) use different methods and criteria to “shape” (to design or to present) form in order to: engender experience (UL), manifest meaning (LL), maximise performance (UR), and guide flow (LR). The five levels of aesthetic complexity represent actual milestones of growth and complexity, both for the designer and the user (the photographer and the viewer). Stages of consciousness represent levels of organisation with important emerging qualities that tend to come into being in discrete quantum-like fashion. The five levels of aesthetic complexity proposed by DeKay are:

- Visual Aesthetic: beauty in form, colour, tone, structure, repetition (static).  

- Phenomenological Aesthetic: beauty experienced through multiple senses, through time, including movement in space (rich full-body experience). 

- Process Aesthetic: beauty in the patterns that connect, the elegant fitness and interplay between form and process, in the order of change (dynamic). - Ecological Aesthetic: beauty in things whose patterns create ecological health (higher level of ecological awareness). 

- Evolutionary Aesthetic: beauty in the order of process (long-term over extended periods of time / life cycles).   

Each time we operate from one of these levels we see the world differently since consciousness and existence are inseparable. Through long term practice temporary states become permanent traits. The more access we have to these stages the greater the spectrum of consciousness of the creator and richer the product of his expression. 

 

These distinctions are like the map of a territory, but they are not the territory itself. People rarely work in such clear cut manners. An artistic product can embody multiple aesthetic levels; it can be critical or challenge our understanding or question the limitations and implications of our perceptions and actions within this matrix of reality. A more expansive analysis on the ways integral theory applies to architectural photography is beyond the scope of this epilogue but it will be further developed in volume two. 

 

In the editorial article ‘Two-way street: the photography of architecture’, Kate Bush highlights a pivotal dialogue and exchange of ideas between European and American photographers that has defined the history of architectural photography: in 1929 the American photographer Berenice Abbott took Eugene Atget’s photographs from Paris to New York and by doing so inspired the work of Walker Evans and subsequently the New Topographics (“the baton was passed from Europe to America”). In 1973 Stephen Shore sought the advice of Hilla Becher in Germany and shortly after the Dusseldorf School at the Kunstakademie was created and dominated world photography in the 90ies (“the baton was returned”). On a much more modest but personal level, my perception and understanding of the American way has been influenced by the work of Ken Wilber, the Integral Institute and the broader transpersonal movements in the U.S. (in both the translative interpretations and transformative experiences of our zeitgeist). I had visited the U.S. once before in 2002 as I was beginning to unfold this “integral multiverse” but back then it was just for leisure and with friends and family being my guide. This time with the generous scholarship by Fulbright, I developed my own itinerary and timetable, and I got to experience a simulated version of living and working there. A non-stop fast-paced work schedule from city to city and state to state during some days; inspiring meetings, constructive dialogues and moments of reflection during other days; and above all, a heart-felt encouragement and uplifting support to continue my work.     

 

In the acknowledgement section I express my deepest gratitude to all the people who helped me and those who participated in this project. Here I would like to give an extra appreciation to prof. Mark DeKay for his generous foreword to this book and both him and his wife Susanne Bennett for their loving support and warm hospitality during my stay in Knoxville as well as during the whole journey. I feel very fortunate to have met such affectionate and considerate souls.

 

This publication marks the completion of a project that started with the application period (December 2014 to April 2015), then the preparation period (May 2015 to September 2015), followed by the five months in the U.S. (October 2015 to February 2016) and then two months back in Greece post-processing, editing, and publishing; but it is not the end of the journey. It is a tree whose branches will continue to give fruits and I look forward sharing new varieties as they mature internally and externally.

May you, in viewing this visual journey, share the enjoyment of discovery and connection.

Pygmalion Karatzas

April 2016

Integral Lens book collections
(click on thumbnail to view full volume)

Further links:

Integral Lens project additional information:

www.pygmalionkaratzas.com/integrallensprojectinfo

Integral Lens academic paper:

www.pygmalionkaratzas.com/integral-lens-paper

Integral Photography article:

www.pygmalionkaratzas.com/article-integral-photography

Editorial projects from United States:

www.pygmalionkaratzas.com/projects-usa

Virtual samples of framed prints in decoration settings
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