Reading photographs and scenes as palimpsests—multiple temporal and cultural layers visible simultaneously—deepens the observer's capacity to see complexity.
In The Tale of Genji, Murasaki Shikibu embedded layers of meaning within scenes: historical references, poetic allusions, psychological depths, and sensory details coexist in singular moments. This practice of layered perception applies directly to photographic seeing. Every photograph contains multiple times: the moment of capture, the history of the place, the viewer's personal memory, cultural associations. A photographer trained in layered perception learns to notice simultaneously: the surface texture, the historical weight, the emotional resonance, the cultural signification. This requires slowing down and asking: what am I actually seeing here? What stories are embedded in this space? What ghosts of other moments inhabit this frame? This practice cultivates what might be called archaeological seeing—the ability to perceive depth, time, and meaning beneath surfaces. Rather than seeking clarity or singular narrative, layered perception embraces complexity, ambiguity, and the coexistence of multiple truths within a single image.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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