photo sharing and upload picture albums photo forums search pictures popular photos photography help login
Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Nine: Composition -- putting it together > Gulls over Alcatraz, San Francisco, California, 2007
previous | next
12-JUN-2007

Gulls over Alcatraz, San Francisco, California, 2007

Alcatraz Island has one of the largest Western Gull colonies on the Northern California Coast. Two of these gulls fly over the Cell House that once housed federal prisoners. Built by the US Army in 1912, the Cell House was once the largest steel-reinforced concrete building in the world and housed military prisoners until it became a federal prison in 1934. The prison was a place of incarceration. The gulls in flight are symbols of freedom. I composed this image to compare contrasts and similarities. The gulls in flight echo the forward and recessed facades of the prison, as well as the two poles that extend from the building. The building is large and brown, while the birds are small and white. Both the building and the birds thrust forward, and are aligned on the diagonal. How could I “arrange” the birds to fit so neatly into my composition? By anticipating what might happen, waiting, and shooting profusely. A number of gulls were nesting on the roof of the building, and were constantly coming and going. I found a vantage point creating this triangular block of space in the sky, and waited for the gulls to fly into and through it. I put my camera on “multiple” burst shooting, and held the shutter button down whenever multiple gulls flew through that triangular space of blue. The beautiful thing about digital imaging is that every shot is essentially free. I shot several hundred images over ten minutes and found ten that worked fairly well in terms of gull position, wing configuration, etc. This was the most expressive of them.

Leica V-Lux 1
1/500s f/5.6 at 19.5mm iso100 full exif

other sizes: small medium large original auto
share
Phil Douglis21-Jun-2007 19:04
Thank you, Jenene and Ceci, for seeing the ironic relationship between the gulls and the prison. Alcatraz itself is an ironic relic -- a terrible, ugly, forbidding place that has become a major tourist attraction, a pleasure outing for thousands. The gulls have indeed ironically found sanctuary in the very place where criminals were once held as prisoners. And from Alcatraz, a place that once symbolized man's tragedies and failures, we can view the beauty of the glorious man-made skyline of San Francisco, and the great bridges that span the Bay.
Guest 21-Jun-2007 17:49
Most expressive picture, symbolic of freedom juxtaposed with imprisonment. Two white birds soaring free (perhaps mates, another thing that prisoners don't have) against the blue of the sky, and underneath, this ugly, crumbling structure where thousands of men were incarcerated in the most brutal conditions. The simple animal world doesn't have enough brain power to dream up such things as prisons, and contents itself with the basics of food, sleep and sex--while people, with the greatest capacities for solving every human/environmental problem, instead finds ways to wreak destruction upon themselves and upon the planet. I love the idea that Western Gulls have colonized this awful place, taking advantage of a free "nesting site" out in the middle of the water, where they are safe and have the most glorious vantage point. It's such incredible irony!
JSWaters21-Jun-2007 05:40
A prison for those without feathers, but a sanctuary for the winged fliers.
Jenene
Type your message and click Add Comment
It is best to login or register first but you may post as a guest.
Enter an optional name and contact email address. Name
Name Email
help private comment