I photograph maples every year, and people ask me, “Don’t you get bored? I mean a maple is a maple, right? Isn’t it the same view every year?” I respond with an emphatic ‘no’. I then begin to explain the significance of each experience filtered through the zen lens. The hues, saturations, contrast, and sharpness are ever-changing and essentially infinite, so my perspective stays fresh. Returning to the zen master D.T. Suzuki’s teaching, he said, “I like zen because everything is zen.” A beginner sees endless possibilities in each theme and pursuit, so that is the mindset I bring to each project I participate in, and I hope for the same from other visual artists that I work with. For my students, however, I understand that the paradoxes created by the Beginner’s Mindset requires time to fully grasp. Many colleagues and fellow photographers feverishly hold onto their pride and feel that because they are “professional” photographers, they know the best expression of a theme and therefore limit the potential of the photographic subject.
Another photographic subject that colleagues and friends ask me about are my numerous trips to Mt. Fuji. For 25 years, I have photographed Mt. Fuji as much as my schedule would allow me to, and every time I see it, I do so with fresh eyes. Most people don’t practice The Beginner’s Mindset or comprehend its value in their daily lives, sadly especially the visual artist. People living next to a well-known photographic subject become desensitized, and the photographic impact seems to decrease in their perceptions because they are exposed to it often. Mt. Fuji is in my backyard, and I have photographed it at least 1,000 times. On each visit to Mt. Fuji, my aspiration is always to return to the wonderment I experienced when I first laid eyes on Japan’s largest active volcano during the golden hour as the sun rose in a pool of crimson and gold, spilling light over the peak, then enveloping magnificent Mt. Fuji. I know that Mt. Fuji will never appear exactly the same due to how the light projected from the sun interacts with the particulate matter at different levels of atmosphere surrounding the earth, from the Exosphere all the way to the Troposphere.