The passing of time, caught in a single photo | Stephen Wilkes

201,665 views ・ 2016-06-27

TED


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I'm driven by pure passion
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to create photographs that tell stories.
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Photography can be described as the recording of a single moment
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frozen within a fraction of time.
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Each moment or photograph represents a tangible piece
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of our memories as time passes.
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But what if you could capture more than one moment in a photograph?
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What if a photograph could actually collapse time,
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compressing the best moments of the day and the night
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seamlessly into one single image?
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I've created a concept called "Day to Night"
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and I believe it's going to change
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the way you look at the world.
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I know it has for me.
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My process begins by photographing iconic locations,
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places that are part of what I call our collective memory.
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I photograph from a fixed vantage point, and I never move.
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I capture the fleeting moments of humanity and light as time passes.
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Photographing for anywhere from 15 to 30 hours
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and shooting over 1,500 images,
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I then choose the best moments of the day and night.
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Using time as a guide,
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I seamlessly blend those best moments into one single photograph,
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visualizing our conscious journey with time.
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I can take you to Paris
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for a view from the Tournelle Bridge.
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And I can show you the early morning rowers
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along the River Seine.
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And simultaneously,
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I can show you Notre Dame aglow at night.
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And in between, I can show you the romance of the City of Light.
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I am essentially a street photographer from 50 feet in the air,
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and every single thing you see in this photograph
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actually happened on this day.
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Day to Night is a global project,
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and my work has always been about history.
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I'm fascinated by the concept of going to a place like Venice
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and actually seeing it during a specific event.
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And I decided I wanted to see the historical Regata,
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an event that's actually been taking place since 1498.
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The boats and the costumes look exactly as they did then.
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And an important element that I really want you guys to understand is:
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this is not a timelapse,
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this is me photographing throughout the day and the night.
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I am a relentless collector of magical moments.
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And the thing that drives me is the fear of just missing one of them.
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The entire concept came about in 1996.
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LIFE Magazine commissioned me to create a panoramic photograph
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of the cast and crew of Baz Luhrmann's film Romeo + Juliet.
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I got to the set and realized: it's a square.
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So the only way I could actually create a panoramic was to shoot a collage
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of 250 single images.
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So I had DiCaprio and Claire Danes embracing.
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And as I pan my camera to the right,
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I noticed there was a mirror on the wall
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and I saw they were actually reflecting in it.
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And for that one moment, that one image
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I asked them, "Would you guys just kiss
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for this one picture?"
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And then I came back to my studio in New York,
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and I hand-glued these 250 images together
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and stood back and went, "Wow, this is so cool!
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I'm changing time in a photograph."
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And that concept actually stayed with me for 13 years
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until technology finally has caught up to my dreams.
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This is an image I created of the Santa Monica Pier, Day to Night.
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And I'm going to show you a little video
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that gives you an idea of what it's like being with me
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when I do these pictures.
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To start with, you have to understand that to get views like this,
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most of my time is spent up high, and I'm usually in a cherry picker
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or a crane.
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So this is a typical day, 12-18 hours, non-stop
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capturing the entire day unfold.
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One of the things that's great is I love to people-watch.
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And trust me when I tell you,
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this is the greatest seat in the house to have.
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But this is really how I go about creating these photographs.
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So once I decide on my view and the location,
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I have to decide where day begins and night ends.
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And that's what I call the time vector.
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Einstein described time as a fabric.
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Think of the surface of a trampoline:
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it warps and stretches with gravity.
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I see time as a fabric as well,
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except I take that fabric and flatten it, compress it into single plane.
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One of the unique aspects of this work is also,
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if you look at all my pictures,
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the time vector changes:
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sometimes I'll go left to right,
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sometimes front to back, up or down, even diagonally.
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I am exploring the space-time continuum
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within a two-dimensional still photograph.
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Now when I do these pictures,
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it's literally like a real-time puzzle going on in my mind.
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I build a photograph based on time,
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and this is what I call the master plate.
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This can take us several months to complete.
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The fun thing about this work is
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I have absolutely zero control when I get up there
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on any given day and capture photographs.
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So I never know who's going to be in the picture,
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if it's going to be a great sunrise or sunset -- no control.
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It's at the end of the process,
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if I've had a really great day and everything remained the same,
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that I then decide who's in and who's out,
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and it's all based on time.
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I'll take those best moments that I pick over a month of editing
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and they get seamlessly blended into the master plate.
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I'm compressing the day and night
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as I saw it,
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creating a unique harmony between these two very discordant worlds.
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Painting has always been a really important influence in all my work
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and I've always been a huge fan of Albert Bierstadt,
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the great Hudson River School painter.
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He inspired a recent series that I did on the National Parks.
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This is Bierstadt's Yosemite Valley.
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So this is the photograph I created of Yosemite.
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This is actually the cover story of the 2016 January issue
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of National Geographic.
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I photographed for over 30 hours in this picture.
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I was literally on the side of a cliff,
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capturing the stars and the moonlight as it transitions,
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the moonlight lighting El Capitan.
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And I also captured this transition of time throughout the landscape.
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The best part is obviously seeing the magical moments of humanity
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as time changed --
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from day into night.
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And on a personal note,
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I actually had a photocopy of Bierstadt's painting in my pocket.
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And when that sun started to rise in the valley,
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I started to literally shake with excitement
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because I looked at the painting and I go,
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"Oh my god, I'm getting Bierstadt's exact same lighting
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100 years earlier."
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Day to Night is about all the things,
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it's like a compilation of all the things I love
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about the medium of photography.
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It's about landscape,
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it's about street photography,
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it's about color, it's about architecture,
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perspective, scale -- and, especially, history.
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This is one of the most historical moments
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I've been able to photograph,
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the 2013 Presidential Inauguration of Barack Obama.
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And if you look closely in this picture,
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you can actually see time changing
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in those large television sets.
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You can see Michelle waiting with the children,
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the president now greets the crowd,
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he takes his oath,
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and now he's speaking to the people.
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There's so many challenging aspects when I create photographs like this.
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For this particular photograph,
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I was in a 50-foot scissor lift up in the air
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and it was not very stable.
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So every time my assistant and I shifted our weight,
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our horizon line shifted.
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So for every picture you see,
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and there were about 1,800 in this picture,
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we both had to tape our feet into position
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every time I clicked the shutter.
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(Applause)
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I've learned so many extraordinary things doing this work.
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I think the two most important are patience
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and the power of observation.
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When you photograph a city like New York from above,
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I discovered that those people in cars
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that I sort of live with everyday,
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they don't look like people in cars anymore.
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They feel like a giant school of fish,
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it was a form of emergent behavior.
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And when people describe the energy of New York,
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I think this photograph begins to really capture that.
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When you look closer in my work,
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you can see there's stories going on.
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You realize that Times Square is a canyon,
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it's shadow and it's sunlight.
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So I decided, in this photograph, I would checkerboard time.
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So wherever the shadows are, it's night
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and wherever the sun is, it's actually day.
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Time is this extraordinary thing
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that we never can really wrap our heads around.
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But in a very unique and special way,
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I believe these photographs begin to put a face on time.
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They embody a new metaphysical visual reality.
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When you spend 15 hours looking at a place,
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you're going to see things a little differently
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than if you or I walked up with our camera,
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took a picture, and then walked away.
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This was a perfect example.
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I call it "Sacré-Coeur Selfie."
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I watched over 15 hours
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all these people not even look at Sacré-Coeur.
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They were more interested in using it as a backdrop.
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They would walk up, take a picture,
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and then walk away.
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And I found this to be an absolutely extraordinary example,
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a powerful disconnect between what we think the human experience is
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versus what the human experience is evolving into.
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The act of sharing has suddenly become more important
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than the experience itself.
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(Applause)
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And finally, my most recent image,
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which has such a special meaning for me personally:
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this is the Serengeti National Park in Tanzania.
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And this is photographed in the middle of the Seronera,
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this is not a reserve.
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I went specifically during the peak migration
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to hopefully capture the most diverse range of animals.
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Unfortunately, when we got there,
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there was a drought going on during the peak migration,
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a five-week drought.
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So all the animals were drawn to the water.
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I found this one watering hole,
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and felt if everything remained the same way it was behaving,
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I had a real opportunity to capture something unique.
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We spent three days studying it,
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and nothing could have prepared me
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for what I witnessed during our shoot day.
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I photographed for 26 hours
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in a sealed crocodile blind, 18 feet in the air.
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What I witnessed was unimaginable.
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Frankly, it was Biblical.
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We saw, for 26 hours,
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all these competitive species share a single resource called water.
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The same resource that humanity is supposed to have wars over
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during the next 50 years.
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The animals never even grunted at each other.
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They seem to understand something that we humans don't.
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That this precious resource called water
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is something we all have to share.
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When I created this picture,
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I realized that Day to Night is really a new way of seeing,
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compressing time,
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exploring the space-time continuum within a photograph.
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As technology evolves along with photography,
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photographs will not only communicate a deeper meaning of time and memory,
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but they will compose a new narrative of untold stories,
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creating a timeless window into our world.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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