03/6/15

Still-Life Symbolism

BEING IN ITALY gives us access to amazing works of art from the Renaissance Masters, the Romans, even the Etruscans… Not just in museums and churches, but also in the private homes, courtyards and gardens we visit during my Tuscany photography workshop. Paintings are rich with the symbolisms of their age, many which have continued to trickle down into our time, and still strike a deep cord within us. One of these themes, very popular in painting as well as photography is the STILL LIFE. Beyond just being a pretty, well composed, or dramatically lit tabletop scene, the objects chosen to be represented can have a deeper, extra, or even secret meaning that is hidden within the image.

fruit, basket, bowl, cornucopia, italy workshops workshop class classes cortona center of photgraphy tuscany robin davis photographyCORTONA STILL LIFE – © Robin Davis
Cortona, Italy is the perfect setting for inspiring us, with golden light through medieval windows, and for shopping at the lush and beautiful fruit markets. However don’t touch the fruit! Just point and the vendor will bag it for you.

 

Fruit is a common symbol of abundance and the seasonal (and fleeting) bounty of the earth, like the cornucopia/horn of plenty from ancient Roman Art, that’s also found in American Thanksgiving harvest themes of prosperity. Each fruit has it’s own meaning as well.

Apples get a bad rap, considering that one led to the expulsion of mankind from the Garden of Eden, but they, as well as pears are connected to the goddess, symbols of the feminine side of the deity from ancient times. Grapes, the vine, and grape leaves relate to the bonds of family, and also prosperity, abundance and plenty. Plums represent the sensuousness of the good life.

Feng Shui uses fruit symbolism to draw peace, prosperity and good luck into the home. Apples are health and harmony, grapes are abundance and material wealth, peaches are the fruit of heaven and immortality, pomegranates are fertility, oranges and citrus ward off bad energy.

 

All of the effects in this image are done entirely in camera and are some of the techniques that I teach in my Cortona Center of Photography Italy workshops.  In fact, this shot was set up and created for my students during one of our lesson demonstrations during the Italy photo course. The assignment was to create a photographic image in camera, inspired by a Renaissance painting.

 

I’ve printed this image with archival inks on watercolor paper and also canvas for a painterly effect and it’s one of my favorites, hanging as a symbol of plenty in my kitchen.

For a limited edition archival print on 13×19 paper: http://www.thethirdeyephoto.com/shop/

 

To learn more about my Tuscany photo workshop classes that I will hold in Summer and Fall this year, visit www.cortonacenter.com.

 

 

all text and images ©Robin Davis

01/2/15
Robin Davis Photography, Cortona Center of Photography, italy photo workshop tuscany photography olive grove trees

Athena and the Olive Tree

A great myth about Athena, the Greek Goddess of wisdom, tells how she became the patron goddess of the city of Athens.

She and her uncle, Poseidon were at war for the title and on the eve of battle, Athena suggested a contest instead,
to see who could provide the best divine gift for the people.

Poseidon produced a gushing spring, but as his domain ruled over the seas, the water was salty and undrinkable. Athena struck the ground with her spear and dramatically, a fully grown olive tree sprang up, to the delight of the citizens. This hearty tree could be easily cultivated, lived a long time and provided food as the olive fruit,
oil for cooking as well as for the lighting of lamps, and beautiful wood for building.

Robin Davis Photography, Cortona Center of Photography, italy photo workshop tuscany photography olive grove trees

The King declared her the winner, by the people’s choice and the city became hers and was named Athens in her honor, and the olive tree became one of her symbols. Tree groves have always been sacredly associated with goddesses, and considered under their protection.

(Poseidon, a sore loser, plagued the city with water issues that are still problematic to this day.)

 

Photo: Olive Grove

text and photography ©2014 Robin Davis