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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Fifty One: Using diagonals for guidance, energy, and meaning > Echoes of the past, Cham ruins, My Son, Vietnam, 2007
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23-DEC-2007

Echoes of the past, Cham ruins, My Son, Vietnam, 2007

Between the 4th and 13th centuries, the Cham people built a religious center in the mountains of Vietnam’s central highlands, about 25 miles southwest of Hoi An. There were 70 temples here until the US Air Force bombed them during the Vietnam War. There are only 20 left, and most are slowly being restored. Visitors can enter some of the ruined halls to view sculpture and artifacts saved from the bomb-ravaged shrines. The walls of the halls are often streaked with light pouring in from windows set into roofs that have been added to protect the sculpture from the elements. I entered this hall as a double diagonal slash illuminated the texture of the ancient mossy brickwork. These diagonals not only energize what would otherwise be a static image – they also make us want to reach out and almost touch the past.

Leica V-Lux 1
1/200s f/4.0 at 10.7mm iso100 hide exif
Full EXIF Info
Date/Time23-Dec-2007 21:25:44
MakeLeica
ModelV-LUX 1
Flash UsedNo
Focal Length10.7 mm
Exposure Time1/200 sec
Aperturef/4
ISO Equivalent100
Exposure Bias-0.33
White Balance
Metering Modemulti spot (3)
JPEG Quality
Exposure Programprogram (2)
Focus Distance

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Phil Douglis07-Feb-2008 22:31
Thanks, Tim, for seeing the importance of the interplay between the diagonals and the curves within that window and just above it. You are right -- contrasting geometric shapes (and diagonals and curves are certainly contrasty) adds energy and a bit of tension here. I like your take on "protection" here -- the diagonal flow is overwhelming in its glow and scale.
Tim May07-Feb-2008 21:18
I agree with Cecilia this is magical - but I think there is a quiet element of not angularity in this image that makes it hum. I am speaking of the curves in the window and of the sculpture above the window - they seem to me to be what the diagonals are protecting.
Phil Douglis29-Jan-2008 23:27
The colors and the angular directional flow drew me to this image, Kal. I loved the way the light brings out not only color but texture as well. It is the texture of time.
Phil Douglis19-Jan-2008 20:46
Thanks, Mo -- diagonals made out of sunlight are everywhere. We only have to look for them.
monique jansen19-Jan-2008 09:44
Diagonals made of sunlight, beautifully done
Phil Douglis19-Jan-2008 05:28
You sum up the mystique here so eloquently, Ceci. Thank you. I was not thinking of diagonals are representing water, but now that you mention it, flowing water is a powerful symbol, and diagonal lines are called lines of power. As for the US Air Force, the reason My Son was so heavily bombed, was that it was sporadically used as a military base and storage depot. There was such an outcry, however, over the bombings, that US President Richard Nixon eventually called them off.
Guest 19-Jan-2008 02:21
What a magical, mystical shot this is, capturing in one image suggestions of men and gods, of universal illumination, a hint of the goddess/feminine -- which in its truncated form hints at violence enough to break at least statuary, but also supplication in the pose -- tropical jungle, and even a sort of "barred" window, which could be an allusion to the prisons of mind and body that various regimes have imposed upon this culture and these people. The colors are of earth and moss and sunlight and stone; the way the light falls in its restful slant also suggests water, which is such an integral part of this country. The bricks are a bit haphazard, telling of unskilled but reverent hands put to use in the making of this little temple. It is comforting to know that even with all the bombing, the mighty US Air Force managed to miss this beautiful building, so that it could serve to connect the past and the present without having to be rebuilt. A masterful photograph, Phil!
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