Making Photographs

 Guest post by Thomas Jay Oord

A theologian. With a camera. Exploring nature. In Chicago.

Those four elements introduce intriguing possibilities and enlightening experiences. I know, because I am that theologian-photographer who made photographs in Chicago.

Making Photographs

I say I “make” photographs. Good photography often results when a photographer works from a vision and uses as camera to portray an intriguing subject. Good photography is art.

I don’t “take” photographs. “Take” sounds like I just happened to click the shutter at an opportunte time. Good photographs are rarely the product of happenstance; they reflect a vison, photographic skills, and intentional experience.

How I think God acts in the world also influences the vision that I, as theologian-photographer, bring to my visual art. In my opinion, God is an invisible, omnipresent Spirit whose presence cannot be directly captured by a camera’s digital pixels. It’s pretty difficult to photograph that which is incapable of being seen. But my theology can still inspire my photography.

Varied Co-Creating

I think God is a creative cause in every moment of creation’s history. I also think creation plays a co-creative role in making the world what it is. Creaturely co-creating is uniquely expressed in urban areas. Consequently, my theology prompts me to wonder how and how well Chicago’s various creatures cooperate with their Creator.

Walking the streets, paths, and out-of-the-way places in Chicago has raised new questions for me as theologian-photographer. It has altered my vision and prompted new ideas.

For instance, I know that birds create nests. Other creatures also act creatively. Among all creatures, humans possess highly advanced creative capacities. As I see it, God inspires and empowers all creatures in their creating.

So I wonder, how well do creatures cooperate with God’s working for a better world? In particular, are humans cooperating well or poorly with God in their urban co-creating?

I’ve noticed Chicago animals adapting to human creativity. I’ve found plants retaking neglected city lots. In some cases, this symbiotic relationship seems to be working. But I wonder, is human creating helping or hindering God’s diverse creatures?

Wild Nature and Nature’s Humans

One highlight for me was the afternoon I made photos of plants growing on the edges of Chicago’s Northerly Island Park. The area was formerly an airstrip. It is now partly re-landscaped to create a managed habitat for native plants and birds.

A sliver of land near the Northerly Island Park, however, is yet to be developed. Some of the “weeds” in that land grow as high as my shoulders. Diverse and beautiful plants burst from this unmanaged strip of soil, watered well by nearby Lake Michigan. The downtown Chicago skyline looms less than a mile away.

Meandering in this undeveloped land, I worked my camera to capture a vision emerging in my mind. I tried to re-present well the juxtaposition of wild, unplanned nature before me and the impressive human craftsmanship in the distance. Wild flowers with an architectural silouette.

As I see it, both unplanned and planned elements can express beauty. Both types of creatures – highly intelligent agents and nonintelligent organisms — respond to their Creator. The photo attached to this essay is the result of my artistic imagination that day.

Conclusion

Prior to photographing in Chicago, most of my experience as a theologian-photographer has been in the wide open places of the northwest. But making photos in Chicago has provoked new thoughts in me about God and nature in urban spaces.

My perspectives on making photos, on God as Creator, and on created co-creating creation have expanded.

 Guest post by Thomas Jay Oord
Artist-in-Residence at the Zygon Center for Religion and Science

Northerly Island October 2015
Northerly Island (Thomas Oord)

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