A group of people on the “down escalator” at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City.
I couldn’t resist the idea of photographing the steady stream of distracted people coming down this escalator at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. I employed a technique that I often use when shooting on the street, namely to find an interesting structural subject (in this case, the escalator) and then wait for the right person or people to occupy the frame. I made a series of photographs of people on this escalator, and ended up liking this one the most. There are a number of specific things about the people in the scene that attract my attention, but I’ll let you discover them on your own, should you be so inclined.
Congratulations to Jameson Mitchell – 2011 Commencement Exercises, University of California, Santa Cruz.
And for something really, really different… an informal photographic portrait of our son, Jameson, made at his UCSC commencement exercises this past weekend. A number of things should be noted:
1. We’re proud of you Jameson!
2. We have now completed the 11-year process of putting three kids through the UC system. Whew!
3. A portrait? From Dan? Really? Really. :-)
4. Thank you, Jameson, for allowing me to post your photograph on the blog.
A man descends the Peter Macchiarini steps past worn and dilapidated buildings in downtown San Francisco.
I photographed this rather bleak scene on a side street in San Francisco last summer. I first walked up this street to photograph the “Peter Macchiarini Steps” that ascend steeply here in place of a normal sidewalk. Then I saw the opposing shapes of the large square ductwork and the smaller round pipes against the weathered and dilapidated exterior of the buildings. Finally, I found that the occasional person descending the steps might add a point of interest, so I waited…
When I look at a photograph like this one I see layers of different things – but maybe that’s just me! :-) At one level it is just a slightly gritty little street scene, presented in a pretty unvarnished manner. (I did some work to straighten angles and so forth in post – I generally don’t get to use tilt/shift lenses when I shoot street!) Then I see several interesting-to-me geometries in the scene. I mentioned above the opposing bends of the pipes and ducts and their relative positions on the wall. I also see a collection of rectangular shapes throughout the frame: the lighter area of wall behind the figure, the doors in the lower center, the small window above the doors, the three upper windows, and the sections of wall between them. Then there are a bunch of horizontal components: the large lighter band across the upper center, the very small patterns of the siding, the sequence of upper story windows against siding, the lower edge of the siding. And within these separate layers of order there are things that don’t quite fit. The man of course, wearing black and in motion with one foot suspended in mid-step, but also the trash can in front of him – also black, the bits of conduit running in odd directions, the small section of pipe in front of the door, and the concrete sidewalk steps.
Of course, you are free to see a picture of some guy walking down the steps…
Photographer and visual opportunist. Daily photos since 2005, plus articles, reviews, news, and ideas.
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