Islands in Black and White

Robert Blank travels. So, his love for seeing new places and a

brochure advertising an upcoming trip got Blank packing for the Mediterranean. His trip was brief, a mere nine days, but in that time he captured some of the architecture, life style and culture of Malta, Corsica, Sicily, Sardinia, Mallorca and

Menorca.

   Among the photographs hanging in his Noble Horizons show is a collection of images depicting groups of men: men sitting at cafes,

men standing in the streets, men walking in the company of other men.

   Blank found these groups interesting because we are not likely to see

such configurations in the United States.

   Other images capture narrow, winding roads that seem to lead nowhere, a heavily

adorned altar and what seems to be an abandoned carnival where the rides

stand stationary.

   When it comes to photography, Blank follows a relatively traditional

path. He continues to use a 35mm camera and shoots strictly in black

and white, despite the lure of the digital world and all of its bright

colors.

   “The world is in color, but somehow I think black and white is more

honest,� Blank said in an interview. “You look more at the picture and not the colors.�

   Not a photographer by trade, Blank began taking pictures when he retired about 12 years ago. He worked as an urban planner in the inner city and saw many unforgettable scenes of poverty and bad living conditions.

   Looking back he wishes he had

documented some of the things he saw throughout his years working in the

Bronx, Harlem and other rough neighborhoods.

   But, as Blank said on Sunday, “It is never too late to start taking pictures.â€�

   

   Blank’s show, “Islands of the Western Mediterraneanâ€� will be on display at the Learning Center at Noble Horizons through May 31.

   The exhibit is open on weekends, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Noble Horizons is located at 17 Cobble Road in Salisbury, CT, and for more information call 860-435-9851.

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