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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Eighty-five: On Tour – cruising the Mississippi from Memphis to the Gulf > Cemetery, National Military Park, Vicksburg, Mississippi, 2012
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02-DEC-2012

Cemetery, National Military Park, Vicksburg, Mississippi, 2012

Seventeen thousand Civil War Union soldiers and sailors are buried here, of which 13,000 remain unknown. This is the largest National Cemetery in the United States. It occupies ground once held by Major General William T. Sherman’s men at Vicksburg. Not all of the those buried here were killed at Vicksburg. Many are reburials from battlefields elsewhere in Mississippi, Arkansas and Louisiana. While our tour group visited a nearby museum featuring a Union gunboat, I broke away in order to take advantage of a setting sun casting its light on the carpet of leaves covering the cemetery. Instead of diluting the image by attempting to photograph the massed gravestones, I use only a single gravestone to anchor my image. This stone marks the grave of an Illinois Sergeant. I use it to represent all who rest here. I layer the image by including another stone in the middle ground, representing the unidentified soldiers make up 75 per cent of the burials here. The background of this image adds critical context. We see the masses of headstones in the background, indicating the scope of this cemetery. I bring the top edge of the picture down, abstracting the huge tree dominating this background. This framing calls attention to the tree's multi-branched shadow reaching towards the two lonely graves that float upon the field of fallen leaves.

FujiFilm X10
1/600s f/3.6 at 7.1mm iso100 full exif

other sizes: small medium large original auto
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Phil Douglis22-May-2014 19:34
Beautifully said, Bernard. You read your own meaning into this image, and you honor both the image and the subject itself in the process. Thank you.
Bernard Bosmans22-May-2014 11:51
Fallen leaves upon fallen soldiers, a beautiful blanket of leaves that won't cover the past, but tells us that we always have shadows and light, blindness and sight in our lives.
Phil Douglis20-Feb-2013 01:16
Thanks, Ken. Composition is always a matter of precise organization. It is more than an esthetic challenge -- it should help define the meaning of the image itself. And that is what I tried to do here.
Ken Zaret19-Feb-2013 20:48
Great composition and light. The slightest angle off would change the image. Well done.
Phil Douglis04-Jan-2013 22:35
You and I often return to the "cycle of life" as a theme in our imagery. You are right -- the light and its attendant color play the role of life here, while the cemetery itself represents death. It is a shame that such deaths are not natural, but are caused by our perpetual desire to destroy, kill, and maim each other throughout recorded history.
Tim May04-Jan-2013 04:18
An image of death that is suffused with light.
Phil Douglis31-Dec-2012 03:11
Thank you, Carol, for mentioning ancestry here. The branches do indeed suggest the family tree of life itself. But that tree is also surrounded by symbols of death -- dead leaves, and the graves of men who died in a war.
Carol E Sandgren31-Dec-2012 02:26
Before I was even able to scroll down to see the whole image, I thought of ancestry because of the tree's immense shadow and all the branches. That plus the small gravestones in the background, but now I see Sergeant Watson's grave in the foreground which gives the image a whole new emphasis. The golden fallen gingko leaves are colorful and add life to an image otherwise about passing on and remembrance.
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