Raju Blog - Czechia: After the Velvet Revolution
https://www.facebook.com/raju.prasad.71868/media_set?set=a.2165451900153452&type=3
Hi Raju, thanks for sharing. I admire your capture of street life, light on the sky, food, and people at work (the iron smith photo was amazing - his tools lined, a tombed enclosure, a relaxed ambience. I wanted to fritter away my life on the streets at some point, painting and writing - someone Charles Dickens would have found interesting in his might sojourn across poverty stricken streets of London. So, I also loved musicians, people sitting on benches, the Batman kid, the hues of the city. I liked the variety you sought, I liked the text at the restaurant that you wanted to chat up the service guys on their life - George Orwell wrote his paris life in poverty that way. I am not too much a fan of architecture, but there is no denying how well you captured the azimuth of a citadel or a museum or cobbled streets. the Photo of the lady on the train, with visual cues on eyes was a delight - because of the fundamental curiosity of capturing with brevity all that happens around us. the philosophy of a flexible life. Like Herr custor said in "The Old Fox" - "He could be a tramp living under a bridge and still be happy". Happy "Tramping". and I like the wise quip on Korean guy with Mobile shot on what a camera should do (be used more). Lastly, The capture of Prague in Winter Light reminded me of the protagonist collecting rare ceramics and sculptures in Bruce Chatwin's novel "Utz". A city is so many things...
https://www.facebook.com/raju.prasad.71868/media_set?set=a.2165451900153452&type=3
Hi Raju, thanks for sharing. I admire your capture of street life, light on the sky, food, and people at work (the iron smith photo was amazing - his tools lined, a tombed enclosure, a relaxed ambience. I wanted to fritter away my life on the streets at some point, painting and writing - someone Charles Dickens would have found interesting in his might sojourn across poverty stricken streets of London. So, I also loved musicians, people sitting on benches, the Batman kid, the hues of the city. I liked the variety you sought, I liked the text at the restaurant that you wanted to chat up the service guys on their life - George Orwell wrote his paris life in poverty that way. I am not too much a fan of architecture, but there is no denying how well you captured the azimuth of a citadel or a museum or cobbled streets. the Photo of the lady on the train, with visual cues on eyes was a delight - because of the fundamental curiosity of capturing with brevity all that happens around us. the philosophy of a flexible life. Like Herr custor said in "The Old Fox" - "He could be a tramp living under a bridge and still be happy". Happy "Tramping". and I like the wise quip on Korean guy with Mobile shot on what a camera should do (be used more). Lastly, The capture of Prague in Winter Light reminded me of the protagonist collecting rare ceramics and sculptures in Bruce Chatwin's novel "Utz". A city is so many things...
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