
Consider the shot above. One of the hardest thinks I find to deal with is the "foreground obstruction." Put something in front of the viewer's face, and the viewer's eyes go there, generally to ill effect. Here it works, however, as the post serves to act as an internal frame, turning the scene into something of an asymmetric diptych, with the main scene on the left, a man and the train, and the secondary scene on the right.

Here is an entirely different sort of shot. Moody, and telling a simple story, or perhaps not, perhaps it has more questions than answers. An engine, a backlit girl, and a round thing of some sort. Some fog, some beams of light, just a bit of track, the form of the engine invisible, with even the numberboards displayed only subtly. Very mysterious, where is the location, is it a pedestrian crossing, where is the girl going and what is she putting in her mouth, what is the mound in the foreground? A simple study, nice. (I'd like it a bit better if I knew what the round thing is.)

But does it fall on the busy, disorganized side of complexity? Maybe, but I am interested in how to capture complexity so I find it interesting to contemplate. Is there a lack of a recognizable composition? Maybe, although the solid rectangles among the complex mix of lines and the contrasting signals do provide some structure. Would I put it on my wall? Well, no.

As always, I like to think about the nuts and bolts of the scene, but here that seems inadequate to the task. There is an internal frame of the train portrait, but it is itself composed a fascinating set of geometric elements and interesting color/texture patterns on the metal surfaces of what is customarily a forbidding place, the underside of a bridge/viaduct at night. And the bolts, both near and far, the shadows! Into that area the train is seemingly moving, but what an interesting angle! The distortions of the extreme wide lens and the fog cause the train to emerge as a monster, red eyed, and what is the nature of its lair with its glowing light underneath? A wondrous image, best thought of lyrically rather than analytically.
Consider the variation in compositions, in style, in abstraction versus documentation across the shots here, and in the all the shots in the slide show. Nick's work is not only fabulous but it shows his versatility and his artistry. An outstanding body of night photography. If you want to see more of Nick's stuff, go to his web page or to his Flickr site.
1 comment:
Trains did the last photo a grievous injustice when they cropped it upon publication.
Post a Comment