Posts Tagged ‘light’

20 Dec 2009

Churchill & New York City

What a truly random combination of work, but it’s what I have to discuss right now!

As I prepare to prepare (yes, I’m that far behind) for my trip to Ireland, I’m doing my best to finish editing my NYC photos.  It’s a fair bet, however, that while I may post them in my gallery on my website, nothing new is going to make its way to my prints until I’m back.

I encourage you all to take a  look at the NYC photos I’ve posted thus far and will likely add to in the next week (so check back).

Mark Tisdale – Sept 2009 in NYC Gallery

There’s already some photos in there of which I’m very proud.  And as is often the fact, I look at them and ponder when I might make it back to explore more of what I saw.  Not tomorrow by any stretch, but someday I expect.

Lady Liberty Lifts Her Light

Lady Liberty Lifts Her Light

Knowing my sometime predictable luck,  it should be no surprise that the boat ride on my first day in New York was as close as I ever got to the famous Statue of Liberty.  Bad weather the morning I intended on visiting left this my best view, but it was not bad at all.  The statue is a true treasure, and my photos that day gave me an excuse to do something a little more artistic, creating this many layered image to resemble an old color postcard.

New York Rhythm

New York Rhythm

This is one image I was quite taken with.  It does require a small amount of explanation, though.  I am quite near sighted and have an astigmatism.  I would not get far in the world without my glasses.  I was on a night tour of the city and took my glasses off for a second and glanced down a side street.  This is more or less what I saw.  And I loved the view, the city boiled down to its chaotic best.  Lights without form!  It suddenly occurred to me that I could reproduce this for my camera by putting it out of focus.  So, you can see the world as I saw it.  I played with this off and on the rest of the evening, and may post more but this first try was my favorite.

And now that you’ve seen some New York City, I can jump to Winston Churchill, because the connection is obvious isn’t it?  Maybe you don’t know that the iconic prime minister of the United Kingdom, in fact, had American ties?  His mother was born in Rochester, New York, and was raised in Brooklyn and New York City.    So yes, there is a connection between New York and the famous British Bulldog. However, truth be told, there’s a different reason I’m posting this one.  A couple of days ago, I was contacted by a would be buyer who really liked my photo of the statue of Winston Churchill silhouetted in front of London’s Big Ben.  However, she had a special request that I fulfilled.

She wanted me to include the Churchill quotation that I have always included with the description of this piece on the print itself.  And I think it was an excellent request!  I’m really happy with the result and wanted to share it.  I think it definitely helps anchor and explain the image and it was almost as if I left that massive base just for this purpose.  I wish I could have been that forward thinking!  Anyway, here’s hoping she enjoys it when she receives it!
16 Aug 2009

Luxor Temple Ruins

Luxor Ruins

Luxor Ruins

Our first afternoon in Luxor, we wandered along the Corniche – the riverside walkway along the Nile (apparently used in Egypt but borrowed from the French).  Our guide was pointing out things we could do, amongst which was the temple ruins at Luxor.  We managed to come by just as the late afternoon sun was casting a warm glow over them.  They look quite atmospheric, but they are not amongst the best ruins to visit.  We were told we’d pretty much seen what there was to see but could visit.  I’m not sure any of our group did visit, but I know this was as close as I got.  I was satisfied with these wonderful shots of these  ruins.

Luxor Temple

Luxor Temple

This is another perspective on the ruins – here you can see a distinctive New Kingdom temple with an obelisk.  The temple ruins at Luxor was once the site of ancient Thebes and were dedicated to what was know as the Thebian Triad – the three gods popular in Thebes – Amun, Mut, and Chons.  The temple was founded around 1400 BC.  This shot catches a vibrant blue and gold sky with just a hint of the warm passing light casting on the stones.

For more temple ruins and prints from Egypt, please check out my Egypt Gallery.

6 Aug 2009

Felucca Prints

Traditional sailboats that have plied the Nile for ages still use this ancient highway today.  These wooden boats with lateen sails are mostly pleasure craft these days but in the past would have been one of the main ways of moving goods and people.

Grace

Grace - Nile Felucca

In this photo, the strong contrast accentuates the darkness of the waters and the reflection of the boat.  The sails also pop against the dark blue skies.  This sailboat is likely only out for a quick look at the sights near Aswan.  Most of the Felucca today travel either around or between either Luxor and/or Aswan.

Beached - Feluccas Along The Nile

Beached - Feluccas Along The Nile

This flotilla of feluccas were not traveling together, but all beached at the same spot to spend the night.  this was actually from my group’s first evening on the Nile.  We’re still very near Aswan having made little progress with winds that were too aggressive.  Lovely warm light against the boats and that fantastic cloud filled sky were well worth not making it very far that day. There’s something very graceful about sailboats, even beached awaiting another day.

Nile Sunset

Nile Sunset

One more sunset shot.  Our second day on the Nile, we had the chance to go ashore and see a typical Egyptian Village.  This was the site that greeted us as we made our way back to the boat for the night, a fantastic sunset silhouetting our happy felucca on the beach of the Nile.  The intensity of the light and colors was amazing.

There are more felucca prints and more of Egypt in my Egypt Print Gallery – I hope you’ll take a look!

13 Jul 2009

Mérida – Yucatan Capital Prints

Mérida is the capital city of the Mexican state of the Yucatan.  The Spanish founded it in 1542 on the foundations of an older Maya City, T’ho.  Because it’s foundations were laid on an older city, Mérida is said to be one of the oldest continually occupied cities in the Americas and its centro historico (Historic district) is among the largest.  Mérida has architecture stretching from it’s foundations to today gracing it’s easy to follow numbered streets.  Because of the hot temperatures (at least in the summer), the city tends to close down in the afternoon and re-open as the sun goes down.  I never did figure out when they close back down again!  Even the local car rental place I used one day while I was there closed in the afternoon and re-opened in the evening.

Mérida Cathedral

Mérida Cathedral

The Cathedral in Mérida may not be the largest or grandest on the earth, but it is the oldest in the mainland of the Americas.  It is also far older than one might think.  The Cathedral was built between 1561 and 1598, using readily available stone. The Spanish pulled down the temples the native Maya had built and used it in this cathedral.  This photo was taken in the late afternoon as the city was just waking up again.  The warm glow is from the sun hanging in the west.

Iglesia de Santa Ana - Mérida

Iglesia de Santa Ana - Mérida

The city of Mérida is a collection of neighborhoods or barrios built around neighborhood churches.  This is probably among the older ones and was likely  built on the platform of a Maya temple.  Originally built in the 1500s, the Iglesia de Santa Ana was built to serve indigenous Maya and mulattoes.  The church was reconstructed in the 1700’s and in the 1800’s, the nearby Paseo de Montejo, a wide Parisian style boulevard was built and this barrio became the address to have.  The people who lived in the area were eventually pushed into other parts of the city.  Today, it’s a beautiful if eclectic church (observe the pyramids on the towers).

Wired

Wired

This photo is the epitome of Mexico (in my mind anyway). Gorgeous colors and textures that just call for photos.  No matter how much you upkeep things in this partof the world, nature is constantly fighting you.  Anywhere else, I would fight heaven and earth to eave out the power lines, but here, they are such a huge part of the landscape it’s hard to imagine a photo without them (despite the fact that they obviously weren’t there when these buildings were new).  This photo is from the streets of Mérida, a simply beautiful and friendly city.

Neon Dreams

Neon Dreams

Mérida is very much a place that’s proud of it’s city.  It’s an incredibly clean place where they have managed to preserve so many of the buildings that have been built there over the centuries.  I don’t know any of the history of this theater, but it looks very art deco to  me and there was a sign that I believed indicated it was owned by the government, but very much still an active part of the community.  On my last night in town, I managed to catch this shot of it with the marquee and neon lights accenting the architecture.  An enjoyable shot both for the place and for those of us who love these old movie palaces.

More photo prints from Mérida are available in my Mexico Prints.

10 Jul 2009

Puuc Hills – Uxmal & Kabah Prints

If you’re ever planning a trip into the Yucatan to see ruins, you should really try to get into the Puuc Hills.  From Mérida, Uxmal and Kabah are an easy day trip, but there are more Puuc Hill ruins to see to the extent I wish I had more time when I visited to travel a bit further afield.  None-the-less, the ruins I did see were excellent.  The ruins in this area of the country have the distinction of having a style of Maya architecture named for them.  They are also different from their low land counterparts in not being built over Cenotes (sink hole access points to the underground rivers of the Yucatan).  Instead, the Maya built large cisterns in these cities to capture rain water for the dry months.  If the theory that droughts were largely responsible for the end of the Maya way of life, these people were probably the first to suffer.

Uxmal, the first place I visited is still touristed but not nearly so heavily as Chichen Itza.  People were living at Uxmal around 500 AD.  It flourished for sometime as the main city in the region, but it’s star dropped after the fall of Chichen Itza.  By the time the Spanish arrived, Uxmal was already largely abandoned.

Uxmal - The Nuns Quadrangle

Uxmal - The Nuns Quadrangle

This is part of a large complex of buildings adjacent to the main pyramid at Uxmal.  The first Spaniards to study this location thought that it looked like a nuns convent, hence the name.  It’s believed that these buildings may have been a school for princes.  This was the last building of the quadrangle, note the masks on the corner, these are masks of Chac Mool, the rain god, and are on each corner of this building.  Also note the elaborated decorations.  This is typical of the Puuc style.  The prominence of Chac Mool highlights the importance of rain to the people living here.

Palacio del Gobernador - Uxmal, Mexico

Palacio del Gobernador - Uxmal, Mexico

This is another of the buildings at Uxmal, said to be one of the best examples of the Puuc style.  Built in the 9th an 10th centuries, it was probably an administration building for the region.  As with other Maya buildings, it is aligned with the heavens, the main door lines up with the planet Venus.

Inheritance of the Maya

Inheritance of the Maya

The site of Kabah is yet less touristed and there’s been far less reconstruction here. There was a city here as early as the 3rd century which reached it’s height around the 8th.  By the 11th century, the site was abandoned.  This palace appears to have had 30 or more rooms and is remarkably intact considering how long it’s been since it was inhabited.

Uxmal is a UNESCO World Heritage site.  Kabah is not listed, but should be on the list of anyone who appreciates the ruins of our past cultures.

More photo prints from both sites are available at my Mexico Prints.