Long Train Running | Down Around The Corner
Continuing with an occasional series of photographs taken spontaneously while travelling by train.
This set of photographs were taken on Friday 29 November when after a month of rain and grey the morning frost, blue skies and sunshine were very welcome.
With only a second to compose and shoot each photograph, normal elements of photographic control are abandoned in favour of dirty windows, reflections, incidental elements and happy accidents.
I don’t know if there is a genre of photography that concerns itself with the particular style of image making described above? And if there is whether it has a name? All the same it is one that I find most enjoyable. The best technique I have found is to switch to manual focus mode. The problem in auto-focus is that the camera may decide to acquire focus on a blob of mud stuck on the window rather than the splendid chimney or burn’t out car I had hoped to capture. At 100mph there isn’t a second chance for the same photograph.
It’s interesting to think these images represent part of an experience shared by hundreds of people, all hurtling along the rails, all heading in the same direction. The same views from the window, each passenger with a different story and a different destination. When I look at these photographs I think about the stories of other passengers. I wonder what they might be thinking as they look out of the window at an empty, rain soaked railway station or the grey skies as a backdrop to a concrete tower block. Perhaps their sights are accompanied by a powerfully dramatic musical soundtrack? Maybe the woman gazing quietly out of the window is actually seeing very little of what is in front of her? Maybe everything for her is a blur because she is distracted by the grief of losing a loved one. So many stories all rushing through the landscape together. Maybe some will relate to it as a shared experience and maybe some will also be ponder the lives of their fellow travellers. I like to think the romance of train travel isn’t completely dead. However, it is true to say that under the weight of so much technology our behaviour when occupying shared spaces is changing. Personally mine isn’t changing. I never listen to music or sit in front of a laptop and welcome the chance of a conversation with a fellow traveller…
In a mad, fast and ever accelerating world, taking time to ponder fleeting moments is a way of stepping back from the madness. These photographs are, among other things, perhaps about enjoying the journey and not simply rushing to a destination.
To view an earlier series of photographs taken while travelling by train click HERE
The title for this blog post is borrowed from The Doobie Brothers.