25a.jpg May 2026

sketching — Brian Kielt Visual Artist - Studio Notes & Reflections

A photograph is never just an image; it is a frozen moment, a fragment of time captured in a world that refuses to stand still. In viewing , we are not merely looking at a subject; we are looking through a portal into the past—a silent witness to a moment that has already vanished. Much like the accounts of survivors who remember June 25th as a day of both profound loss and enduring legacy, this image carries the weight of history. 25A.jpg

This image acts as a knot in the thread of time, holding together threads of experience that would otherwise unravel. It forces us to ask: What was happening just outside the frame? What story was intended to be told, and what story is being received? It reminds us that truth is often composed of two parts: that which is given (the image) and that which is accepted (our interpretation). sketching — Brian Kielt Visual Artist - Studio

in the photo? (e.g., people, landscape, object) What feeling or message are you trying to convey with it? I can then rewrite it to perfectly match your vision. This image acts as a knot in the

The power of a photograph lies in its ability to force us to confront realities we might otherwise ignore. Just as the "great composition" of the Mnemosyne Atlas used images to structure cultural memory, invites us to arrange our own understanding of the past. It encourages a "shock of recognition," where we see ourselves or our shared humanity in the marks left by others.