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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Fourteen: Expressing the meaning of buildings and structures > Hoover Dam, Lake Mead, Nevada, 2006
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10-FEB-2006

Hoover Dam, Lake Mead, Nevada, 2006

During the Great Depression, five thousand men and their families came to Black Canyon to tame the Colorado River. They worked for five years and created the highest dam on earth. It was the costliest water project ever, and the home of the largest power plant of its time. In this image, I try to express the beauty, sweep, and magnitude of this dam by abstracting it, suggesting more than I show. By using my spot meter to expose for the illuminated surface of the dam, the background goes dark, throwing the surface of the dam into overwhelming prominence. I structure the image around rhythmic repetition, letting the eye flow up and down along the five vertical towers, while at the same time relying on five repeating curving lines and 30 curving horizontal lines on the face of the dam itself to create a pattern filled with dynamic energy. And energy is what this structure was built for more than seventy years ago.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ30
1/1000s f/10.0 at 12.7mm iso80 full exif

other sizes: small medium large original auto
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Phil Douglis18-Feb-2006 03:25
Thanks, Tim, for noting the relationship to the picture of the San Miguel church that follows in this gallery. It should be no surprise to me that you picked up on it, since you and I were shooting both San Miguel and the Hoover Dam together. I must admit that I was inspired by the heavily shadowed image that Margaret Bourke-White made of the massive towers of the Fort Peck Dam for the first cover of Life Magazine, back in 1936. I was but two years old at the time, but that image has always been with me. (http://www.gallerym.com/work.cfm?ID=90 )
Tim May17-Feb-2006 23:28
I especially love how this image relates to the one that follow it in this gallery - The heavy shadows show the the agelessness of the design.
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