I have been going through my old photographs published on this blog to construct a coherent photo story to tell. That process of editing is going to take some time, and as curating a large body of work is never easy. Nonetheless, I was inspired by recent photography friends, such as Raja Indra Putra who painstakingly spent a lot of effort and time to shoot and arrange his photographs in consistent and cohesive themes. My first attempt of such categorization was in my recent series "red" where I found plenty of dominant red photographs which was an irony because red has always been the colour I tried very hard to avoid.
"Three" is another rare occurrence, since I normally have very simple rules for composition: one subject with one plain background. One story, or one idea to get across. I understand that strong photographs are much more complex than this, and I should push myself to evolve beyond simplicity as my main philosophy in photography. Nevertheless, it was a fun process finding all the "three" photographs and believe it or not, NONE of these photographs were planned or arranged in any manner, I merely spotted and found them as they were. I think that is the beauty of photography, both in the sense that you can choose to create a photograph entirely out of your own visualization, or the complete opposite, you go and find opportunities and shoot them.
Three Foreign Workers
Three Traditional Dancers
Three Golden Statues of Hindu Gods
Three Punpkins
Three Broken Windoes
Three Transparent Raincoats
Three Raised Cheerleaders
Three Pedestrians
Three E-P1s
Three Plastic Heads
Three Harley Quinns
Three Naked Mannequins
Three Bulbs
Three Bottles
Three Men Apart
Three Trolleys
Three Ties
Three School Girls
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