Savannah Beach, 2018
Sittin’ in the mornin’ sun
I’ll be sittin’ when the evenin’ come
Watching the ships roll in
And I watch ’em roll away again, yeah
I’m sittin’ on the dock of the bay
Watching the tide roll away
Ooh, I’m just sittin’ on the dock of the bay
Wastin’ time
“Dock of the Bay,” Otis Redding
Time is a human construct, and it is relative. I saw a show recently where two teenagers found an unprocessed roll of film and took it to the store to have it developed, rolling their eyes impatiently when the clerk pointed at the sign that said it would take 1 hour. I suppose if you’ve only known a world where you can shoot a photograph with your phone, see it immediately, and send a copy to almost anywhere in the world instantly, 1 hour may seem an eternity.
This reference point on TIME resonates with me because I lived the evolution. When I started working in photography (1965), the way you got pictures in a hurry was to have your own darkroom, but even then it would be 15-20 minutes after getting into the darkroom before you might have a print, and that still dripping wet. Most people dropped their film off at a camera or department store. From there it was picked up once a day by a courier and carried overnight to a large commercial lab somewhere (I think Charlotte is where a lot of Savannah work went). So in 3-4 days you would have your photos back.
Of course there was Polaroid, but the high per picture cost of that made it a budget buster if you shot much.
Sometime in the 80’s, innovations in compact, automated processing and printing equipment led to the “1 Hour Photo” concept, with lots of false starts and lost investments, but it did eventually become the standard as even small businesses could affordably set up in-house labs. And then customers insisted on getting 1 Hour service, even paying extra, even when they knew they would not return that quickly. We are an impatient species.
So digital capture came along, and we could see the photo as quickly as shooting it. The “instant gratification” aspect alone was enough to know it would become the dominant medium, but the important thing is, still, to slow down, and look closely.
For more of Bill’s photographs, go to https://www.billdurrence.com/index