Everyone
takes pictures of family, friends, pets, and presents over Christmas. I’m no exception, but I also like to
photograph illuminated decorations, lights, displays. I find the gleam of lone colored lights in
the midst of winter’s darkness to be very appealing (see last year’s Christmas
blog on “A Little Touch of Christmas” for the reasons why).
Since
the holiday is now past and quickly drawing to a close—even if many of the
trees are still up—I want to share some photographs taken this year (well, at
the end of last year) to help in
making a proper goodbye, and to see if the mood can still be maintained, at
least until the end of this blog.
The
first photo was taken in the PPG “Winter Garden” in Pittsburgh. I love the “W” formation that occurs when the
tree is viewed from a low angle and contrasts with the strong lines of perspective
in the ceiling above it. I’ve taken variations
of it over the years, and this time the result was formally symmetric and yet
still “Christmassy”:
Outside that building in the
courtyard is the skating rink, with an even larger tree in the middle of
that. And the walkway across the street leading
up to the rink also has trees decorated with lights. They make for a fine entranceway to the area
late in the day when the sky is darkening:
The contrast of the ivory point-lights against the purplish-blue
of the rest of the scene provides subtle contrast and is ideal for the early
evening mood.
Also
interesting is how Christmas lights can become almost abstract when seen in
close-up or under modifying conditions.
For example, this shot is of lights wrapped around a brick support
column outside the “Good Zoo” at Oglebay Park in West Virginia, near Wheeling:
The texture brought out by the glows and shadows makes
the stonework look more like Styrofoam than
brick, softening an otherwise harsh impression.
Another abstract view arose when
we drove through Oglebay’s new illuminated rainbow tunnel. The lights are stationary as they change
color, but the long exposure and the moving car made the resulting trails seem dynamic
and haunting:
Though the whole length of the tunnel I saw only through
the viewfinder of my camera, the number of exciting “starburst” pictures that resulted was worth it.
Finally,
near the skiing area at Oglebay, the blue lights wrapped around the trees produced
an oddly undersea marine-life impression, turning the trunks into underwater
phosphorescent growths gleaming with organic color as they seemed to lift
bizarre “feelie” extensions. The
addition of the car’s headlights makes for a furtive interloper from some other
universe:
These are all abstract patterns
of Christmas—avoiding most things personal, intimate, or “cute.” But even in these pictures that at first
might strike you as stark, the interplay of light, color, and shape still
create—even without pets, family, and gifts—that essentially “quiet” impression
of Christmas, turned-in, secretive, a little haunting, and dependent as much on
aesthetic arranging and artistic effects as does a tied bow or Santa’s red
suit. It’s a gift-wrapped season, and as
much a joy to look at as it is to feel.
So I
leave you with these visual impressions, something tangible for your Christmas
memories, as we wave good-bye to a holiday that currently might recede in our
hearts but not yet withdraw from our view.
I hope
you all had a merry Christmas, everyone.
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