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| We just came back from a visit to an exhibit of Ansel Adams photos, some of the Group of Seven (Canadians will know who I mean... :-) paintings and a modern Canadian photographer's industrial landscape pictures (to contrast with the Adams' natural landscape ones). Very interesting - Rouge - you mustn't be too far away from McMichael.... The exhibit is well worth a visit....! When viewing the pictures I kept thinking landscape/gardening thoughts! In particular it struck me that Adams' photos would be a lot less powerful if they were in color. Black and white added so much clarity to the scenes. On a considerably(!) more mundane scale, that's how I feel about the backyard garden here. The largely green and white color scheme makes for a bigger impact (and a serene feel) than would a planting with an extensive and vivid range of colors. Even in the front garden here, where I do aim for a more colorful display, I limit the palette of colors on display at any one point in time and place in the garden. Perhaps some might find it boring but I find it harmonious. The other photographer's work was in color but that, too, often had subjects with fairly limited color ranges. Pictures which included strong lines and voids/'negative' spaces in the pictures were, to me, more interesting and dramatic than those where there was less clarity of lines and spaces. I try to aim for strong lines and negative spaces in the garden too. It would be interesting to see if anyone else would see the pictures in the same way I did or would see something else entirely! The gallery and its setting in a wooded lanscape is beautiful and interesting too. At the moment the plantings are dominated by sweeps of Rudbeckias and ornamental grasses. Generally I do't like BES as individual clumps in garden beds as I find the color harsh and hard to blend with other things, plus they seed like mad. But I do like them in large sweeps so they worked well in this site. There are wide concrete walkways leading to the gallery and outbuildings. The concrete had been colored - obviously in an attempt to imitate rock in/near the site. (I don't remember noticing the colored concrete in previous visits, but we often visit in winter so I might just have missed it due to snow.....) I can't make up my mind whether the colored concrete works or not! On the one hand, it's obviously fake; on the other, it does pick up on some of the natural colors.... Here's some photos so you can see and decide for yourself: This is obviously the type of rock they were aiming to imitate: One of the sweeps of BES and ornamental grass: |
Here is a link that might be useful: Ansel Adams exhitit at McMichael
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| That mass planting is very beautiful. And I actually like the colored concrete as it's rather subtle. I wish I was close enough to see the exhibit. I wasn't familar with Burtynsky, but I really like his work. It's fascinating the way he finds beauty in man's destruction of the earth. Adam's photos are, of course, masterful examples of nature photography. |
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- Posted by ken_adrian z5 (My Page) on Sat, Aug 10, 13 at 6:21
| bummer.. i was expecting some side by side B&W comparison pix .. of your own garden ... i might have to play with the digital in that regard ... ken ps: oh.. thx for the link.. and i agree on Adams work ... |
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| Thank you 'Woody' for the suggestion. I will keep it in mind. |
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| Ken - I do find it very useful to print garden photos in black and white when I'm thinking about making changes to an area. Taking the distraction of color out of the pictures makes you see things differently, so it can help suggest things you might not otherwise have thought of. The link below shows how I used B&W to help sort out what I wanted to do when making the 'moat bed' back in 2009. |
Here is a link that might be useful: B&W in planning 'moat bed' in 2009
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