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If it helps mine was the inside of an empty cup, I was tempted to make it half full or half empty but decided to leave it empty.
I remember doing this stuff back when I studied photography, it didn't make so much sense at the time but the subjects/items we had to photograph all had an order our tutor had set so that she could evaluate our skills. With the more open subjects like this apparently our composition and technical skill was evaluated more than our art(if you can ever evaluate that one will never know). On the more defined objects we would need to photograph then write to explain what inspired us and what thoughts went into the picture and process, sometimes with the intention we based our work on another photographer or artist. It's interesting stuff, I'm glad I got to do it just before digital came in.
Just a quick additional comment - thanks to everyone, great photos, it was a really hard choice for me. I'm actually doing an "art of photography" course at the moment and this was a theme that was given to us last week by the tutor.. He said at the time, "in my head - pictures of the soul, the emotions, the thoughts" (I paraphrase slightly as it's all in French). We were meant to do between 3 and 5 photos, although they didn't have to be directly related to each other. Overall, it's a really great course, and I'm super-glad I did this one rather than the more practical one I had planned on doing in the first place.