Merced River and El Capitan

MercedElCap2005|05|21: Merced River and El Capitan. Yosemite National Park. May 21, 2005. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.

Merced River and El Capitan. Yosemite National Park. May 21, 2005. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.

This photograph was made during the spring of 2005 when the Merced River was flooding during a very high spring runoff. Here the water is almost spilling over the banks near where it passes by El Capitan.

keywords: el capitan, cap, merced, river, flow, high, water, reflection, cliff, face, morning, tree, forest, meadow, grass, nose, light, spring, yosemite, valley, national park, california, usa, landscape, travel, scenic, sierra, nevada, mountains, stock

Forensic astronomers date famous photograph

From Yahoo News:

“Autumn Moon, the High Sierra from Glacier Point,” taken by Ansel Adams in Yosemite National Park, is a thrilling view of the American West, featuring a waxing Moon rising over dark, ice-tinged peaks.

But precisely when Adams took the iconic black-and-white picture has never been clear, and dates for it range from the mid to the late 1940s.

A team led by Donald Olson, a professor of physics and astronomy at Southwest Texas State University, claim that the mystery can be resolved.

The linked article includes the details and a copy of the photograph. One interesting fact is that the identification of time, date, and location resulted from the discovery of an original color exposure of the image.

Getty People

GettyPeople2004|06|20: People. Getty Museum. June 20, 2004. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.
People and Sky. Getty Museum. June 20, 2004. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.

I post some of my photos at http://www.photo.net/, where members “rate” and, better yet, comment on photos submitted by other members. (See my photo.net gallery here.)

I posted this shot there earlier this week and it turned out to be one of those where my assessment of the image differs from that of those who rated it. While it did get a few good ratings the image also was rated poorly by a few viewers.

While the ratings are interesting to see, I don’t get too upset about it. (Though I do love it when I get high ratings… go figure!)

In any case, I like this image. Several things about it appeal to me:

  • Formal aspects, including the large lower space with the converging lines and reflecting the sky.
  • The slightly off kilter quality of the ceiling compared to the rigidly horizontal/vertical quality of the floor and the columns on the right and left sides.
  • The positions of the people, both as a group and individually. They are arriving from the stairs and fanning out into the open space in the image. Their poses are, to me, interesting. The right- and leftmost figures mirror one another, especially in the way their arms are raised. The leg positions of the two right figures are the same. All of them pick up a bit of glow from the reflections off of the stone.
  • The clouds in the blue sky seem somewhat mystical and otherworldly – and, no, they were not photoshopped into the image!

So, whatever the photo.net reviewers may think about it, I like this image.

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Stairs at the Getty Museum

GettyStairs2004|06|20: Stairs. Getty Museum. June 20, 2004. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.
Stairs. Getty Museum. June 20, 2004. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.

I like Southern California’s Getty Museum almost more for the architecture than for the collection – and the collection is pretty good.

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Photographer and visual opportunist. Daily photos since 2005, plus articles, reviews, news, and ideas.