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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery One: Travel Abstractions -- Unlimited Thought > Arcade, Singapore, 2007
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01-SEP-2007

Arcade, Singapore, 2007

Abstraction can often create mystery. It asks questions of the viewer, allowing their imaginations to enter an image and come up with their own answers. This is such an image. We had just finished our shoot in Singapore, but I always have a camera in hand when I travel, just in case an opportunity presented itself. I was standing in an arcade in front of our hotel waiting to leave for Malaysia when I saw a woman carrying an umbrella enter the far end of the arcade and walk towards me. A triangle of light illuminated a wall at the end of the arcade, which complemented the geometric panels and a circle of light on the floor. Tropical plants hang overhead and cast their shadows in the circle on the floor. We have both a tropical and cubistic context for the lady with the umbrella, who is abstracted in mysterious shadow. The umbrella incongruously seems to be protecting her from that that triangle of light. Using my multiple imaging button, I kept firing shots as she walked ever closer. Suddenly a man stepped into the triangle of light at the back of the arcade. Far from spoiling my concept, he enhances it by thrusting out his arm and looking at his watch. His arm and hand leads us to the free arm and hand of woman, and we note the energy crackling in the negative space between that hand and her dress. She comes towards us, while he looks away. Her elbow stops just short of the edge of the triangle, while his hand stops just short of the shadow around it. This scene is charged with such tensions. The mystery woman, swathed in darkness, is frozen forever in mid-passage, as is the gesture of a man she never sees. The rest is left to our imagination. When I lightened this image and removed much of the abstracting shadows, I could see the expression on the woman’s face, note the fabric of her dress, even see polka dots on the inside of the umbrella. Without these deep shadows, the image shows too much and says too little. When I restore the shadows, the image is bathed in mystery. Such is the power of abstraction.

Leica V-Lux 1
1/640s f/8.0 at 44.2mm iso100 full exif

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Phil Douglis03-Feb-2009 17:19
Thanks, Shawn, for stressing the role that light plays in this image. The shadows hide detail, while the light forms a series of circles, squares and triangles that pull us through the image. As you note, these geometric shapes relate as well to the subjects themselves. The diagonal thrust of the triangle provides a dynamic complement to the thrust of the man's arm and hand, and makes it crackle with tension and energy. The circle of light on the flow echos the curve of the woman's umbrella, and the squares of light on the tiles pick up the vertical thrusts of the colonnade itself. The light also creates the shadows that abstract the image and projects the tropical shadows of the plants upon the tiled floor.
Guest 03-Feb-2009 16:29
I like everything about this image. I love the light that catches the man at the end of the passageway. I like the umbrella. I like the leaves that dangle from the right side of the frame and I like the tiles on the floor. I like that the shape of the umbrella is somewaht repeated by the roundness of light that hits the floor behind her. So much is being told in this image just by the light itself.
Phil Douglis08-May-2008 03:10
Thanks, Baine -- your imagination is obviously energized by this image. Mine was as well.
Guest 08-May-2008 02:07
Very mysterious indeed; a curvaceous feminine element(of my choosing too), confidently moving through the shadows towards me. She's undeterred by the groping limbs of the outside world and doesn't miss a step, not even from the memory of the man in her recent past. A man, who is unable to grasp the darkness before him, still living in the light of his past...yeah I could go on but I'll be embarrassed by lack of short term memory and writing skills that match
Yup, this is my kind of abstraction. Thanks for the stroll down memory lane.
Phil Douglis06-Feb-2008 18:56
And thank you, Suzy, for coming to my galleries to study and learn. You grasp many of the reasons why this image works as expression and define them well. I welcome your comments and look forward to working with you.
Suzy Walker-Toye06-Feb-2008 16:09
As well as the aforementioned aspects of both the photo and the encounter, I also really like the many levels of contrast between the figures of the man and the woman. She is in shadow and he is fully exposed, you can see all the details of his outfit, demeanour and almost comic watch-looking stance. You can see the man as an actual individual even though you cannot see his face. Whereas the woman is more a general silhouette, an ideal, an elegant and delicate womanly shape with no real ideas about the individual that she is.

Thank you Phil, it’s really refreshing to find a gallery like this. And many thanks to Barry Moore who recommending this gallery (cyberbook) to me in a PM from a comment on my galleries. I’ll enjoy going through the book and I’m sure I’ll learn loads :)
Phil Douglis20-Jan-2008 21:50
Thanks, Barry, for appreciating my intentions here. Geometry and time playing equal roles in defining a moment that may never be repeated. The image is charged with energy and asks more questions than it answers. You are right -- it is all about anticipation. What, what, what, is going to happen here next?
Barry S Moore20-Jan-2008 10:25
This image certainly has a sense of anticipation. The ladies crossed legs show her walking stance and the gentlemen looking to his watch. The geometric shapes add a another element of interest drawing the viewer. An excellent capture of the moment.
Phil Douglis28-Sep-2007 01:26
Thanks, Patricia, for your fast response and for the welcome back. You see in this what I wanted you to see, and the questions it raises in your mind are very similar to what this image asked me. The umbrella is up because Singapore often offers pouring rain or blazing sun. As you can see, the sun in shining as I made this image. Thanks again for your wonderful comment.
Patricia Lay-Dorsey28-Sep-2007 01:14
Welcome back, Phil! I've been anticipating seeing your images and reading your texts from your latest travel adventures. And this--the first image I see-does not disappoint. On the contrary it speaks to me on many levels, the first being light & shadow, my own recent obsession. By keeping the woman-your primary subject--in shadow, you heighten the power of her presence coming towards us. I feel her singleminded focus on getting where she wants to go. And this power is enhanced by the shapes that surround her. The triangle of light at her back. The half circle that she holds overhead. The circles of light under her feet. The receding columns at her side. Even the subtlety of the shapes of her relaxed hand silhouetted on the back wall coupled with the open hand of the man behind her. The plants--overhead, backlit to her side and with their shadows cast on the tiles beneath her feet--do their part to add to the perfection of this scene.

And then there is the narrative my mind wants to create. Where is she going? To meet someone for a drink perhaps, or maybe to pack up to leave Singapore as you are doing? And the man. Why is he looking at his watch with such an intense gaze? Is he late for an appointment, or is he waiting for someone to meet him? I want to know. These people interest me. Your image, in its refusing to lay everything out for me, makes me even more curious.

Phil, this is a superb example of expressive photography. All the elements are here, even the incongruity of her using an umbrella in a covered walkway. Certainly abstraction is present, as are human values. I commend you on presenting us with an excellent teaching tool, as well as a very fine photograph.
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