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1/125 f/22.0 50.0 mm ISO 160

SONY ILCE-6000

E PZ 16-50mm F3.5-5.6 OSS

EXIF - See more details

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snow
winter
suburbia


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225 visits

this photo by John FitzGerald

I like the big version; you be the judge. Type Z or click the pic.

Fred Fouarge, Ernest CH, Bruno Suignard, Keith Burton and 13 other people have particularly liked this photo


Latest comments - All (23)
 John FitzGerald
John FitzGerald club has replied
Your countryside is a little more tolerable in winter, I think, though, George. I hope considerable effort goes into restoring the countryside you have lost this year. Supposedly London's parks are its lungs, but in Canada and Australia the forests are our lungs.
4 years ago.
 Keith Burton
Keith Burton club
I really like this one John..............the snow really softens the urban landscape and hides a lot of unattractive things as well. I like the contrast between the trees and buildings and also the mix of horizontal and vertical lines. Your composition is superb, especially the placement of the shelter and the lone person sitting inside. The muted colour palette is really nice too. Top-notch work sir!
4 years ago.
 John FitzGerald
John FitzGerald club has replied
Thank you very much, Keith. The muted palette is a result of my slow familiarization with this camera. I finally got the focus and creative style right.

The tree on the right reminded me of trees in Japanese drawings, which I thought added some interest against the concrete.
4 years ago.
 Old Owl
Old Owl club
Big is best, John; particularly because it seems to reduce the human figure to insignificance (which is probably the whole point of the new topographic movement). It works well, and I love the colour palette of this image.
4 years ago.
 John FitzGerald
John FitzGerald club has replied
Thanks, Old Owl. In the catalogue to the original New Topographics show, William Jenkins claimed that its photos were stripped of the "artistic frills" of beauty, emotion, and opinion. Of course, whether that is even possible is debatable. People find meaning in things whether one was intended or not (and of course they may be right). Maybe the New Topographers were conveying, consciously or unconsciously, the idea of the insignificance of the individua. I used to worry about that in my own photos of downtown Toronto -- I used people mainly as compositional elements but thought I might be portraying them as insignificant. Then I realized that they had made the environment they were dwarfed by, which made them suddenly powerful figures. Then I realized that their environment was to a large extent forced on them by other tiny figures who had the right connections, which made them seem like victims. Maybe all three opinions are right. But it certainly seems that New Topographics' stripping procedure is faulty.

Me, I put people in because people are interested in people. They create tension. People in red clothes create lots of tension. Of course there may be other reasons I do that that I'm entirely unaware of.
4 years ago. Edited 4 years ago.

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