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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Forty-Nine: Creating an echo with rhythm and pattern > Confucian Temple, Nanjing, China, 2007
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10-SEP-2007

Confucian Temple, Nanjing, China, 2007

Huge sticks of incense constantly burn before the statue of Confucius in Nanjing's 1,500 year old Confucian Temple. The characters imprinted on the outside of the sticks incongruously appear as well on the burning ash itself. I organize the image around the repetition of vertical thrusts – the three sticks of incense echo the vertical folds of the statue’s softly focused robe just behind them. The crossed hands emerging from the robe repeat the ash emerging from the incense sticks as well.

Leica V-Lux 1
1/200s f/4.0 at 31.6mm iso100 full exif

other sizes: small medium large original auto
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Phil Douglis09-Mar-2008 18:49
Thanks, Sun Han, for noticing the silent stance of this image, which intensifies the implied movement of the smoke. And thanks, too, for commenting on the characters on the ash itself, language that crumbles and vanishes as the smoldering fire consumes the letters.
Guest 09-Mar-2008 16:20
a picture that stands still, smokes rising in front of statues, character on the surface of ashes, awesome capture!
Phil Douglis25-Oct-2007 18:36
Thanks, Marcia for the comment -- glad you like it. And thanks, too, for using this image, as well as my portrait, to make the wonderful electronic collage athttp://www.pbase.com/marciamanzello0907/image/87850006 You built that image around the echoing hands, which illuminates what I am trying to teach in this gallery. Thank you.
Marcia Manzello25-Oct-2007 16:16
This capture is SUPER! 2 bad that I am allowed to only post one vote...<3
Phil Douglis15-Oct-2007 22:50
Thanks, Tim, for bringing a bit of Tai Chi's meaning to bear on this image. I instinctively placed the burning incense below the folded hands because they complemented each other aesthetically and symbolically. I was not thinking of the navel here, but now that you mention it, I can see nothing else but that "centering" diamond.
Tim May15-Oct-2007 18:21
I have been studying Tai Chi and my teacher is slowly teaching us some of the foundations of belief that are behind the body movements - one aspect of this is the concept of our center which is just below our navel. This image emphasizes the "center" in the diamond that is created by the burnt edge of the incense and the folded hands.
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