Yearly Archives: 2008

American Monument

Really, really Big.

‘Really, really Big’. Thus starts the introduction to this book of photographs by Lynn Davis, authored by Witold Rybczynski. Rybczynski’s 4 page introduction is alone worth the price of admission to this book, which features pictures of American Monuments – be they gas stations or the Lincoln Memorial – all in gently printed monochrome. The whole production reeks of class and presents the viewer with subtle images which let you do the thinking. Not that common in photo books where the images frequently scream for attention.

If your interests include architecture and fine photography then there is every reason to own this beautifully made book.

Afternoon languor

Warm sun.

This is the sort of thing I can never resist. Warm sun, old bricks (note the earthquake reinforcing plates – this can only be California!) and one of the very best lenses ever made at any price.


5D, 200mm f/2.8 ‘L’, 1/8000, f/4, ISO 400

Bistro Laurent really has no business being a world class restaurant in a hick town like Paso Robles, but there it is and the food is to die for! Scan the wine list and you will find the Zinfandel wine made from my grape crop – it’s the Peachy Canyon Winery “Especial” 2004 – if you are lucky your local store may have some left, but that’s a long shot as the crop is small and the wine sells out quickly.

Seeing Gardens

A fine collection by a master photographer.

Few artificial creations can equal the joy of a beautiful garden. And while Americans, as a whole, care little for lovely gardens – witness the bare minimum handkerchief of grass and a few tired drought resistant plants so common here – Sam Abell shows that beauty is to be found if you look, and Abell has been doing that with an expert’s eye for decades. And you don’t get published regularly in National Geographic for nothing.

I find the Japanese approach, which sees the garden as a thing of spiritual beauty, much preferable to the America minimum cost/dress-it-for-sale version. Or, for that matter, brown lawns decorated with beer cans in all those tract homes and subdivisions bought and lost by fraudsters, whom we will all be bailing out these next few years.

At last count my garden of some two acres had four lawns, three olive trees and some fifty other trees, both fruit bearing and decorative, and while I work mightily to keep it looking just so, it cannot compare to even the worst picture in this fine book.

If you like lovely gardens and landscapes beautifully rendered, with a serious hint of Eliot Porter thrown in, you will like this book. At $5.95 mine is a Depression Era special, rivaling the cost of a Big Mac and fries with none of the health implications. (Disclosure: I am long MacDonald’s stock – they may serve poisonous garbage but health and morality have nothing to do with stock selection).

In the Shadow of the Moon

What America needs now.

It seems oddly fitting that this past Friday, the culmination of Wall Street’s (and America’s) worst week ever, that a friend should have sent me In the Shadow of the Moon, a NASA documentary about the twelve men who have walked on the surface of the moon.

In these digital days it’s hard to recall that the still photography gear used by these brave men was nothing more than a Hasselblad 500EL or two fitted with a long roll film magazine and upgraded with some low temperature lubricants to make sure nothing froze up. Americans, as cavalier with the environment as ever, concluded that it would be cheaper to dump the bodies on the moon than to bring them back to earth. Indeed, in the 1970s, the Victor Hasselblad company ran a classic advertising campaign pointing out that Hasselblads, lightly used, were to be had free. All you needed was a round trip to the lunar surface to get yours.

In this documentary you can see various moon walkers banging away with their 500ELs, a large digital counter clearly visible on the right side of the film magazine to remind them how many of their 200 shots they had used.


The Hasselblad 500EL model used by the moon walkers

This film has some so-so movie pictures (the technology of small movie cameras really was pretty mediocre back in 1969) and some tremendous still pictures. These astrophysicists, mechanical engineers and scientists, passing for astronauts, were so elevated by a shared spirit of ecstasy in their journey that their photographic skills rose magically to a new plane as the whole world rooted for America to pull off the Apollo 11 landing.

While most know of the great snap Armstong took of Aldrin, Armstong’s figure reflected in Aldrin’s face mask, there are two special moments that caught my attention. One is a movie frame showing the blast off of the lunar lander on its way to dock with the orbital module before returning to earth. I had never seen this and remember well the feeling of dread that there was only one chance to get this right. As the lander blasts off, the American flag in the lunar surface rocks mightily on its pole. Buzz Aldrin later reported that he glanced up briefly from his instrument checks and saw the flag fall over from the blast, something not visible in the video.


The Apollo lunar lander blasts off from the lunar surface, Old Glory in the blast

The other, also a movie picture, is easily the most beautiful and heart warming in the whole movie. For all their protestations about the beauty of the lunar surface, there is no disguising that the orb of earth from space is a very special thing, and the moment the parachutes deploy in a superb aerial shot, we are all united as one race sharing our adulation of this most perfect of places. This still frame does not begin to do that magical moment justice.


Apollo 11 returns to earth

On a broader scale, the Apollo program reminds us how strong leadership can inspire a nation and the world. The astronauts speak eloquently of their reception worldwide pointing out that, wherever they go, they are greeted with the words “We did it”. That sounds right. The greatest, most generous nation on earth did not seek to keep this to itself but wanted to share its joy and wide eyed spirit of discovery with the world.

Another point to note is the life changing effect the moon trips had on all concerned. Most speak eloquently and mystically of the experience and while logical thinkers will continue extolling Darwinian evolution over creationism, when you see that orb of blue and white approaching, well, you do tend to think of some sort of Supreme Being because it seems too perfect to maybe just have happened.

This is a special piece of film and photography and a recommended antidote to a period in which America’s bleeding is infecting the whole world. American hegemony may be fading, who knows?, but I have yet to encounter anyone, no matter how anti-American, who would argue that a world with Chinese leaders would be a better place.