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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Forty-Two: Adding meaning to scenic vistas > Afloat, Antelope Island State Park, Utah, 2006
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23-SEP-2006

Afloat, Antelope Island State Park, Utah, 2006

Another way to create a memorable scenic vista is to abstract an incongruous subject. That is what I do here, exposing on a fiery sky to make the hills of Antelope Island and hundreds of water birds floating on the Great Salt Lake into black shapes. The sheer number of birds – with every last one of them floating calmly – is an incongruity, something we would never expect to see. I was stunned when I saw this sight, and still am. I placed the hills at the top of the frame to create imbalance and tension, playing against the incredible sense of peace in the water below. The long narrow frame carries us across the image, checking to see if every last bird is adrift.

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Phil Douglis21-Jun-2007 19:41
Much of this picture was sheer chance, Suwanee. We were on our way home at sunset. We thought our photography was over for the day. Suddenly we saw thousands of birds floating on golden water. We stopped the car and got out and began shooting. I began with a wide view, but kept zooming in, making the birds larger and image simpler. I cropped the image top and bottom to intensify the relationship of the horizontal mass of birds and the horizontal silhouette of the mountain range.
Guest 21-Jun-2007 13:33
Absolutely Stunning! Colors, light, composition. Well done Phil!
Phil Douglis12-Nov-2006 19:28
I am truly sorry you were not able to take our suggestion and get out to Antelope Island after we said goodbye to you in Salt Lake that day. The sunset alone was worth the trip. It was, as you say, a breathtaking scene -- this moment of transition from day to night. Nature gives us a scene here that is so vast, yet so simple and serene, and so utterly incongruous as well. Thanks for sharing your feelings on this picture with me.
Sheena Xin Liu12-Nov-2006 08:10

Phil, I really love this shot. It is simple but it is so stunning. I didn't manage to go to antelope park that day, but now I regret I missed a big chance to attend this breathless sunset, witnessing the transition of the color and multitude of the birds.
Phil Douglis08-Nov-2006 20:51
It is always a thrill to get a comment like yours, Ai Li. To know that I have made an image that has literally transported you in time and space, bringing you to my side in front of this vast, astonishing assemblage of waterfowl in a golden frame, inspires as much awe in me as this image itself seems to have aroused in you. I was not quite as speechless as I made this image as you seem to be in looking at it. I uttered two words to myself. I will let you imagine what they were.
AL08-Nov-2006 10:00
The color, the light, the scale, the texture, the framing, everything blew me away! I could imagine myself right there, standing still in awe, feeling the warmth on my face, and taking in the entire beauty for the longest while. I'm speechless now.
Phil Douglis01-Nov-2006 18:22
I love your phrase "hot, soupy , bird stew." It changes everything for me. I originally saw an enormous sense of peace here. Now I see a sense of heat, yet the birds are enjoying the bath. (Very much like the duck floating in the hot lake at Benton Hot Springs (seehttp://www.pbase.com/pnd1/image/69211869 )
JSWaters01-Nov-2006 17:15
You've turned the Great Salt Lake into a hot, soupy, bird stew! Everything is on fire here, and yet the birds bob along as if nothing is amiss. This is stunning.
Jenene
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