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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Forty-Two: Adding meaning to scenic vistas > The Firehole River, Yellowstone National Park, 2006
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27-SEP-2006

The Firehole River, Yellowstone National Park, 2006

Heat colliding with cold shapes this vista – the hot thermal springs of Yellowstone breathing their mist into the chill of a last September dawn. The river itself runs around a curve at lower right, but it is the valley itself that takes star billing here. I use a row of pine trees as a screen in the middle left, their shapes echoing the plumes of steam. The huge hill behind this scene is covered with dead pine trees – a reminder of the real fire that swept through here in 1988. It is this interplay of live and dead trees, of make believe fire with the memory of real fire, that brings this vista to life in the imagination.

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Phil Douglis21-Nov-2006 17:34
Thanks, Jude -- some might think it is difficult to "position" mist -- but it actually is very easy. You just have to be aware of where the mist is and is not, and position the frame accordingly. A steamy, surreal world, and this is one of the few places on earth we can see it, and then only when the air is very cold. I tried to make the most of the play of both light and steam upon the land and water.
Jude Marion21-Nov-2006 14:29
This is such a surreal landscape, Phil. The reds and golds of the grasses seem unreal, or other worldly, and the mist takes this to another level. I especailly like the 'curtain' of mist on either side of the image frame - it makes the viewer feel as if they are a part of the scene.
Phil Douglis12-Nov-2006 19:23
You were just here yourself, Xin, so I am sure this image evoked many good memories for you. Yes, this is all about "heavy breathing"-- Yellowstone is exhaling its pent up thermal energy into the cold dawn. I expose, frame, and compose my image to stress the steam and abstract the land as best I can. That's what gives this image its painterly character.
Sheena Xin Liu12-Nov-2006 07:57
It is more like an abstract painting than a scenic photography. This picture finds the mighty and heavy breathing of Yellowstones¡¯ unsettled earth as well as its astoundingly vigor and beauty.
Phil Douglis08-Nov-2006 20:38
Thanks, Ai Li, for this remarkable interpretation. To see this image as a metaphor for mankind's destruction of the environment is quite shocking. It is easy to see the earth breathing here, as Jenene saw it. But it is also possible to see either nature cooking its own stew here, or perhaps, as you view it, even man torching his world.
AL08-Nov-2006 09:44
I like Jenene's description of the breathing earth. Beautifully said. I see a "fiercer" picture, as if we're in a big hot cooking pot, burning at the mercy of Mother Nature, or even worse of the destructive mankind.
Phil Douglis27-Oct-2006 19:25
To see the ground "on fire" on a cold Yellowstone morning is one of the great thrills for a travel photographer. It is surreal, Jenene, and as you say, we are watching the earth exhaling.
JSWaters27-Oct-2006 14:58
Just the thumbnail stopped me cold in my fly by of your new galleries, Phil. Such a surreal landscape. The undulating slashes of the land in the foreground echo the river's path beautifully. Seeing the mist rise everywhere makes me feel as if I am actually watching the Earth breathe in and out.
Jenene
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