IMAGES ©MICHAEL KENNA / michaelkenna.com
POWER OF
SUGGESTION COLLABORATION IS THE HEART OF MICHAEL KENNA’S MINIMALIST LANDSCAPES
BY ROBERT KIENER
©MATTEO COLLA
“I look for what I cannot see.” This is one of landscape photographer Michael Kenna’s favorite phrases, and anyone familiar with his minimalist black-and-white fine art photographs can see why. This Zen-like sentence contains a lifetime of learning, seeing, and doing on Kenna’s part, which is reflected in his elegant images. In his cozy Seattle studio, Kenna smiles broadly when asked to expand on his comment. “Love to,” he says, betraying just a hint of a northern England accent. (He was born near Liverpool in 1953 and has lived in the United States for four decades.) “I’ve always been more interested in the power of suggestion rather than the literal description of a place or a landscape,” he begins. “In fact, I often think of my work as a sort of visual haiku. It is my attempt to evoke and suggest through as few elements as possible rather than describe with tremendous detail. And I am always looking for those things I cannot see—things that exist through the trees, behind the wall, in the clouds—things that are suggested.” He pauses for a beat and tells a story about “wandering around” the Huangshan (or “Yellow”) Mountains in eastern China in 2008. “It was cloudy and raining and nothing much was happening. But I kept trying to find things. Then this massive, dark gray cloud parted to reveal a miraculous scene (opposite page). I call the photograph I took ‘Heaven,’ and it’s still one of my favorite images. It embodied, or proved, what I had long yearned, hoped for, and believed in—that what we see is not actually what is there. There is so much more.” FILM ENTHUSIAST Kenna’s lifelong quest for more has earned him legions of fans as well as international praise. As one writer noted, Kenna “is an innovator and true master in a field of photography he pioneered himself. ... No wonder his masterfully
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PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHER
PPA.COM/PPMAG JANUARY 2022
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