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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery One: Travel Abstractions -- Unlimited Thought > Humberstone Ghost Town, Iquique, Chile, 2003
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27-DEC-2003

Humberstone Ghost Town, Iquique, Chile, 2003

I was standing in the darkness of a primitive room once occupied by a Chilean nitrate miner, a place abandoned to the dust-laden winds of the Atacama Desert for more than 40 years. Its wooden walls are covered with graffiti, and there is not much left that speaks of either the man or the miner. What photographic approach might work here? I solved the problem by using abstraction to make an image that asks questions of the viewer, instead of providing answers. Using my spot meter, I expose for the brilliantly illuminated dirt floor at the base of the old wooden door. Everything in the shadows becomes dark, the graffiti disappears, and the image is reduced to a series of geometric shapes. Light seeps through the slats of the wooden wall, and a warming sun drenches the doorway and the worn paint on the old wooden door. These elements create a relationship in light and space that asks us to wonder about those who once lived within this small space. The image leaves much to our imaginations, one of the purposes of photographic abstraction.

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Phil Douglis27-Apr-2018 03:16
I love the final eight words of your comment, Merri. "The occupant's business is done and they have left." That is exactly what I intended to leave the viewer with here. They offer a perfect compliment to Jennifer Zhou's earlier observation: "This haunted place! It was once full of stories, and the stories are implied and hidden in darkness, another way to say, 'in our imaginations!' "
Merri 25-Apr-2018 06:26
Less is more here! The wood and structure are allowed to tell the story without distraction. The cold wind came through those cracks, the sand blowing in the wind ate away at the paint on the door, and that harsh light... It tells me one would only want to be in that environment until one's business to be there was done. The open door also means for me the occupant's business is done and they have left.
Phil Douglis21-Aug-2010 18:01
Thanks, River King, for interpreting a ruin in such a positive and thoughtful manner. I agree with you on all counts.
Guest 21-Aug-2010 16:59
Beautiful image... picture of or taken in a lonely and abandoned place like this usually represents somewhat depression or extreme loneliness, but the color and light in this photo represents a very positive spirit here. It's dark and quiet inside of the house, but the light is inviting us to go out, and to explorer something bright and positive.
Phil Douglis14-Nov-2006 18:51
You have absorbed the meanings in this image beautifully, Theodore. And you show us that you understand how abstraction works here to stimulate the imagination of the viewer. Thank you.
Guest 14-Nov-2006 17:08
I understand the use of shadows to define the abstraction in this picture. Yes, I liked the way you composed this picture by spot metering on the light. Like you said it removes attention to the grafity (although still slightly visible - and i feel that's the beauty of it). I see how the photograph expresses what once was. The visibly chiped off small chunks on the door also shows that the door has thus far stood the test of time and is still standing. Another way i saw this photograph was that the door stood as strong as it could to prevent entry but at the end succumbed and the room to which the door was protecting was violated and "vandalised." I say this because to me it reflects the human tendency to try so hard to keep "foreign" influences out (that are contrary to our beliefs) but somehow they (in this case, the grafity) still manages to get in and inevitably becomes a part of us. They hide in the dark but if we look closely at ourselves we can see that they are still there and we begin to understand how our experiences, especially those we've fought so adamantly against, have influenced our lives.
Phil Douglis03-Oct-2006 06:36
Thanks, Carla, for the story. I visited Humberstone's theatre as well, and made an image there. You can see it in my digital archive athttp://www.worldisround.com/articles/30205/photo38.html I saw no ghosts there, but I certainly felt them in this miner's house.
George Christakos14-Mar-2006 14:45
Here comes the the light. Perfect!
Phil Douglis24-Sep-2005 03:14
Good point, Roscoe. Instead of slamming this door behind him, the last miner leaves it open because he no longer cares what might happen here after he is gone. He leaves it to us to figure that out.
Guest 07-Sep-2005 22:01
I see the last miner who lived here leaving for the last time, happy to be gone, he leaves the door standing open because he no longer cares what happens here.
Phil Douglis15-May-2005 15:46
Jen, your comment is a virtual definition of the role of abstraction in expressive photography. I hope others will read it carefully, relate it to this image, and remember all that you say here. You are right -- once you can involve the viewer's own imagination to this degree, your images will move to another level of expression.
Jennifer Zhou15-May-2005 10:12
This is a story printed by light. It requires lot of thinking and strong feelings about the subject on photographer's side in order to come up with something so abstract and brilliant. I learned an important lesson in this image about how to make a picture not literally describe but to be expressive, it is as you said here asking questions of the viewer, instead of providing answers. This is such an important thing to learn to be able to bring our pictures to another level.

Looking at the picture, I am as if standing inside of this dark room. I don't want to be here, and the sun light coming from outside is calling me to come out of this haunted place. Yes, haunted place! It was once full of stories, and the stories are implied and hided in darkness, another way to say, in our imaginations!

Jen
Phil Douglis14-Dec-2004 22:40
Good point, Mikel, about context here. As viewers we see it one way. If we lived in this room, we would see it in quite another.
Guest 14-Dec-2004 22:23
The open door with this light comming in makes it very speciall. Regardless of the history of the miners, knowing that it wold have been a hard life in a wooden and insane shack this photo invites me to go out and see the outside. Though I imagine that the miners, if they wold see this image wold say all the opposite, out there wold meen hard work, wrisk and inhuman working conditions, the same as the inhumanity that it has to have been living in there.
Don Guo04-Dec-2004 07:51
The interspace at left make it perfect!
Phil Douglis01-Dec-2004 22:33
Exactly the point. An open door, a ray of light, indicate a new beginning.
Guest 01-Dec-2004 17:41
I feel invited to follow the light and abandon darkness & age
Phil Douglis29-Oct-2004 21:56
A fascinating insight, Nut. Nobody has yet talked about the feeling of living in here. But you would feel safe in here. It is almost like an ancient cave, warm, secure, a hiding place. Above all safe. Nice interpretation.
nut 29-Oct-2004 18:15

I feel safe to stay in the dark side.
Phil Douglis11-Oct-2004 00:02
I push my viewers in this one, Rodney, to see such things as you have seen. The human imagination is capable of taking great leaps, but sometimes it needs a shove. And that is what I try to do here. Glad it works for you.
Guest 10-Oct-2004 20:49
I definitely see the abstraction here, mostly because of the light creeping in the walls, in addition to the open door. For me, it makes me feel I've been in that old, abandoned room, but finally I see there is a world outside that is so alive and vivid even the walls cannot fully hold back the light from the unseen world.
Piotr Siejka10-Jun-2004 18:56
Great atmosphere here...
Phil Douglis29-Jan-2004 21:45
Thanks, Lisa. Abstraction takes information away, leaving the viewer's imagination to fill in the details. The image becomes a series of symbols instead of facts. We can read into them what we want. Yes, a mood has been certainly created by light and its counterpoint, shadow. But more than just establishing a mood, I am trying to express meaning here. I evoke whispers of the past, by minimizing the present.
Guest 29-Jan-2004 19:46
Wonderful, mood created by light.
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