NikonGear'23

Images => People, Portraits, Street, PJ & Cityscapes => Topic started by: Akira on December 04, 2019, 16:38:27

Title: Gradients of dusk
Post by: Akira on December 04, 2019, 16:38:27
Shot with Sigma fp with 45/2.8.
Title: Re: Gradients of dusk
Post by: armando_m on December 04, 2019, 16:40:24
Wonderful captures, really like the building silhouettes of the buildings look great vs the gradient from warm to cool
Title: Re: Gradients of dusk
Post by: Nikfuson on December 04, 2019, 17:19:01
As said before Akira, you do these shots really well!
Wires add the tension.
Title: Re: Gradients of dusk
Post by: Akira on December 04, 2019, 23:33:26
Wonderful captures, really like the building silhouettes of the buildings look great vs the gradient from warm to cool

Thank you, Armando.  That was exactly what inspired me.


As said before Akira, you do these shots really well!
Wires add the tension.

Thank you, Sten.  The wires flying around are questionable as infrastructure but indeed interesting elements for the composition.
Title: Re: Gradients of dusk
Post by: Jack Dahlgren on December 05, 2019, 03:01:39
Very nice colors. I love the salmon. This time of year we are lucky to have some clouds to break up the gradient a bit.
Title: Re: Gradients of dusk
Post by: Bear Dale on December 05, 2019, 04:13:42
Nice Akira.
Title: Re: Gradients of dusk
Post by: Bill Mellen on December 05, 2019, 11:58:02
Beautifully done Akira!  Interesting theme.
Title: Re: Gradients of dusk
Post by: Akira on December 05, 2019, 19:48:46
Very nice colors. I love the salmon. This time of year we are lucky to have some clouds to break up the gradient a bit.

Thank you, Jack.  The thin clouds add nice color and atmosphere to your image.


Nice Akira.

Thank you, Bear.


Beautifully done Akira!  Interesting theme.

Thank you, Bill.  The gradient offers a nice backdrop to the cityscapes of the metroplolis.
Title: Re: Gradients of dusk
Post by: golunvolo on December 05, 2019, 23:16:53
The idea inspired me, thanks Akira. Taken yesterday evening. Two shots horizontal "pano". Last lights in Granada as seing from the Serrallo neighborhood
  Z6, 70-200 2.8 fl
Title: Re: Gradients of dusk
Post by: RBSinTo on December 06, 2019, 15:52:22
Akira,
I appreciate the effort, but wonder exactly when these photos were taken in relation to the time of sunset? I was taught that the 15 minute period after the actual sunset had sufficient light to see detail in the surroundings while still allowing one to capture the beauty in the sky. In my opinion, all your shots seem to have been taken too late resulting in virtually no detail in the buildings.
Robert 
Title: Re: Gradients of dusk
Post by: Jack Dahlgren on December 06, 2019, 16:11:47
Akira,
I appreciate the effort, but wonder exactly when these photos were taken in relation to the time of sunset? I was taught that the 15 minute period after the actual sunset had sufficient light to see detail in the surroundings while still allowing one to capture the beauty in the sky. In my opinion, all your shots seem to have been taken too late resulting in virtually no detail in the buildings.
Robert

In my view, the critical elements of these shots are the sky and the form/geometry of the buildings. Details about the facade and such distract from those subjects. Much like we can use depth of field to isolate the subject, we can also use darkness, on in high key photos, brightness. Extreme detail is one way of constructing an image, but there are many other ways to tell a story.
Title: Re: Gradients of dusk
Post by: golunvolo on December 06, 2019, 16:23:45
I'm with Jack here and pretty sure is intentional. Akira is using the language consistently - with great effect - through the series.
Title: Re: Gradients of dusk
Post by: Akira on December 06, 2019, 16:53:38
Akira,
I appreciate the effort, but wonder exactly when these photos were taken in relation to the time of sunset? I was taught that the 15 minute period after the actual sunset had sufficient light to see detail in the surroundings while still allowing one to capture the beauty in the sky. In my opinion, all your shots seem to have been taken too late resulting in virtually no detail in the buildings.
Robert

Robert, thank you for your comment.  I understand what you say, especially considering your photographic style which I always appreciate.

As Jack fittingly points out, I wanted to keep the details of the buildings as only suggestive as possible.  Also, I wanted to utilize various reflections and light sources as compositional elements.  I believe the same applies to the image posted by Jack here.

And, as Paco says, that is intentional and is my favored way for the abstraction.

Although I initiated the thread in this category, rendering the details of the buildings clearly was not the purpose for the images.  In this sense, my images may not be considered as cityscapes as documentations of the scene.

As a believer of the simplicity, I always go for the beauty of ellipsis, and I found the underexposure of the shadows works well for me.
Title: Re: Gradients of dusk
Post by: Jack Dahlgren on December 06, 2019, 17:35:20
Robert, thank you for your comment.  I understand what you say, especially considering your photographic style which I always appreciate.

As Jack fittingly points out, I wanted to keep the details of the buildings as only suggestive as possible.  Also, I wanted to utilize various reflections and light sources as compositional elements.  I believe the same applies to the image posted by Jack here.

And, as Paco says, that is intentional and is my favored way for the abstraction.

Although I initiated the thread in this category, rendering the details of the buildings clearly was not the purpose for the images.  In this sense, my images may not be considered as cityscapes as documentations of the scene.

As a believer of the simplicity, I always go for the beauty of ellipsis, and I found the underexposure of the shadows works well for me.

Darkness is a thread that runs through a lot of great art. Many years ago while studying architecture I read Junichiro Tanizaki’s essay “ In Praise of Shadows” which has stuck with me all this time. In a way it was a reaction to westernization and modernization - battles which to some extent have been lost - but it is very human and applies just as well today as we continue to struggle with technologies which both increase and exhaust our ability to contemplate. I highly recommend reading it.
Title: Re: Gradients of dusk
Post by: Akira on December 06, 2019, 17:57:33
Darkness is a thread that runs through a lot of great art. Many years ago while studying architecture I read Junichiro Tanizaki’s essay “ In Praise of Shadows” which has stuck with me all this time. In a way it was a reaction to westernization and modernization - battles which to some extent have been lost - but it is very human and applies just as well today as we continue to struggle with technologies which both increase and exhaust our ability to contemplate. I highly recommend reading it.

I did read "In Praise of Shadows" and I felt I could relate to his sensitivity in many ways.  I also felt the same way as he did in terms of the relationship between the Japanese (Asian) complexion and the color of costumes of Noh and Gagaku.  Thank you for the reminder, Jack!
Title: Re: Gradients of dusk
Post by: pluton on December 07, 2019, 00:16:54
If one was to present the same scene and camera gear to ten different photographers, you'd get ten different photographic results. In Akira's series, great compositional weight has been given to the un-illuminated areas.
His placement of the large, dark areas is, IMO, somewhat unconventional in terms of contemporary trends in compositional style.
My own reaction is that these shots remind me of a feeling of 'let down' I often get after a brilliant day ends, and I notice the now-dark areas of the cityscape are now providing me with less to look at, less to see, less to photograph. The usually supplied artificial lighting rarely provides me with the quantity of visual opportunities that daylight does.