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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Twenty Four: The Workplace -- essence of a culture > Time to Rest, Hmong Village near Pak Beng, Laos, 2005
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Time to Rest, Hmong Village near Pak Beng, Laos, 2005

Hmong farm workers carry heavy baskets such as these on their backs. Day's end brings a welcome respite. I caught this man at just the right moment – looking down, holding his back, about to enter his home. You don’t always have to actually show a person working in order to express an idea about that work. In this case, the hard work is already done. The baskets are all empty and on the ground. It’s his aching back that needs some care.
The warm quality of the late afternoon light sets a mood of closure that adds context to the scene.


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Phil Douglis12-Nov-2006 19:33
You are projecting your own feelings into this image, Thedore. And that is the whole point of expressive photography. I try to make my images as catalysts to thought, as stimulation for the imagination and emotions of the viewer. I made this image, yet you will complete it. It should thereby become as much a work of your own art as it is mine.
Guest 12-Nov-2006 13:17
Moving. I feel a sense of sadness and resignation about him. It's as though he sighed before entering the house thinking of his life and how it wouldn't change. It's strange how the viewer's frame of mind influence what he sees in a picture. Perhaps, I've projected my own current state of mind/emotion onto him.
Phil Douglis06-Jul-2005 16:47
Thanks, Jill, for the fascinating comment. I saw these empty baskets as symbolizing work. I that this guy has been carrying stuff in them on his back all day, and now they are empty and he can rest. You see them, perhaps, as products that can be sold, and you wonder how he makes them. Who knows -- maybe its a little of both. You also identify with the people themselves and want to know more about them -- this man, and the woman driving the cattle athttp://www.pbase.com/pnd1/image/40174219 are people who earn their living through hard and demanding physical work and would both have many stories to tell us if we could get to know them. But for now, it's all a matter of our imaginations at work, isn't it? Thanks again, Jill, for this comment.
Jill06-Jul-2005 12:58
Hello Phil: I am enjoying my morning "travel". This particular image provokes in me questions. If I were there I would request a sit with this particular person so I could find out more about his work with these baskets evidently made painstakedly by hand. How interesting his life seems to me. Just as the woman with the cattle, the dust and long walk as she looks upon the temple in the distance.
Phil Douglis02-Mar-2005 23:50
Thanks, Mo. Not just time -- but also light and space. Each plays a role here in defining meaning.
monique jansen02-Mar-2005 12:25
well captured moment in time.
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