Abstraction for me is that part of the real for which meaning is yet to arrive. It is also used to put things in broad categories. A bird, animal, flower, human kind, God …. are all abstractions till we start knowing about them, their particularities, peculiarities or uniformities, significances so that we can tell them apart from ourselves and the world. For example the entire family of birds with all their diversity are abstracted as "bird" for the layperson. And how about a day in our lives? A day which we define as the time between two consecutive sunrises. Imagine a person in one such day. Though we might know his basic attributes but for what duration of time do we actually interact with the real him/her. These would probably be the moments when reality is present before us. But what of the time when the person turns his back and disappears for us. Does S'he cease to exist? While it might be an abstraction for us with the person retiring to His/her quarters but factual presence appears elsewhere for some else of which we have no idea. James Joyce captures one such day the 16th of June in the life of the protagonist Leopold bloom in his Novel Ulysses; an immensely unreadable text

spanning 730 pages!!! One day and 730 pages and I'm sure the author must've been constrained by time otherwise he would find more activities in the day still left to be de-constructed. However out of these activities very few eventuate into significances that ping us.
In the interregnum of events, activities happen out of definite volition or chance but they become noticeable only in their extra-ordinariness in the sense that they concern us in some way. Rest is all business as usual. So, we ask how was your day? “Exceptional, if we did something exciting or met an old friend or pick up a fight and just okay if it involved just going through the motions. Likewise, in photo making too. We pick up significances and ignore the things in-between, or going further, we try to pick up significances within the in-between things. Coming to the picture here, about something which often does not attract our attention and in that it is part of an abstracted day. Here, we see a man and a woman, probably a couple, carrying out their daily chores. The man lifts what looks like a protective lid of a cock-put to let out the hens for the day. The woman to the right appears engrossed in examining some piece of cloth. Some pieces of tarpaulin coverings await deployment for designated purposes. Birds roosting on top of the tree just keep sitting there- soaking up the sun unspectacularly. There is no sign of an alarm in the birds due to approaching man. They seem to cohabit the space and used to each other’s presence. Everything is in a state of passing. We are able to see it all because somebody has photographed it. For a moment, if we look away, it would make up for a slice from an abstracted day. Things are themselves as they appear. Has the photographer by his arrival altered the very sovereign domain of things in themselves? Looking inside once again into the picture we see man and woman looking in different directions, each engrossed in their own selves. In that sense their individual presences have not yet coalescd for each other yet. From the ease with which they handle their chores we can make out that they are not new to the work at hand. Pelicans on top of the Imli? Tree are set against an equally unspectacular sky. The foliage of trees runs into each other uncharacteristically. In fact the whole scene is one of assimilated presence. The photographer has tried to downplay human presence by aiming higher, including only their torsos. But even with that some gender markers are noticeable; ie. Type of work being performed by man involves lifting unwieldly stuff requiring force and gait, while the woman, fully clad (contrasted to the man wearing a vest) looks intently at something requiring tending. But are these markers not self-evident through our fore-knowledge and thus not of photographer’s making? For me the only question which remains is “Has the photographer tried to interpret the scene while attempting a “things in themselves”? Not really.
The only nit could be that he has tried to compose the scene

Rule of thirds at the sky and the trees, white of pelicans offset by the white vest and the entire scene appearing to be balanced by the posture of man carrying his stuff. With this exception
We do see here "things in themselves".
Thanks for sharing Ganesh!