Gunpowderpatron [2014-12-06 07:09:14 +0000 UTC]
Overall
Vision
Originality
Technique
Impact
The eye is principally attracted to light, followed by movement, and then attention to detail. To read the image is to begin in shadow, to observe the immediate foreground. The brush, while dark, is untrampled. The light grows stronger moving into the background, yet is given neither absolute direction nor strength enough to hold a firm resolve - the light is diffused, entrapped, held in an air that almost tastes dense with moisture. For all this, the emphasis remains not on the relative and surprising weakness of the light evident in the low foliage, but the set of trees taking up the center of the photograph. Their texture is almost indiscernible, giving the viewer the opportunity to begin reading not at the bottom with the shadowy brush, but to jump right from the darkness into the murky grey and mixed yellow hues of the limbs surrounding the scene. In doing so, the center of gravity is shifted the the upper third of the photograph, wherein the greatest divide of color lies and emotion lies.
This is a remarkable picture set in a remarkable region, a cleft in the Cascade Mountains of Western North America. It is not the first misty forest picture I have seen, nor will it be the last, yet its charm comes from its ability to induce senses other than sight - the stillness is palpable, the air dripping with humidity and petrichor, of a low cloud not yet burnt away by the heat of the sun. It pleases me additionally to find images of woodlands set in more colors than dark green and brown; the gold of the scene lends something of a cheerful emotion.
This is my own personal preference, but I really appreciate the use of a watermark as part of the scene it inhabits rather than drawing attention to itself as the herald of the author.
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shawn10000 [2015-04-09 20:37:56 +0000 UTC]
I really like the golds and blacks in this, it almost looks like a painting.
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