photography
Feet on the ground from far away
This little postlet on a tumblr that hails from Minnesota—
—made me stop and go: A-ha! We all do this now, don’t we?
When I was looking for a new apartment a year and a half ago, there were a couple of days where I spent more time in Google Street View than in, uh, the real street. When I was scouting hotels in Paris last spring, I’d position my little yellow avatar at the front door of, say, the Hotel la Demeure and then take a test stroll. Did the Paris that stretched out there seem fun—or foreboding?
And of course it goes beyond Street View. We’re all satellite analysts now; looking for an apartment, I quickly learned the overhead signature of my favorite kind of street. It’s a certain width, with a certain density of dark-green tree splotches and a certain number of missile silos.
But this is all very pedestratian; very practical. You can also think about Google Street View as a new kind of street photography. Jon Rafman scouts Street View for compelling images—and, wow, he finds them. He writes:
Initially, I was attracted to the noisy amateur aesthetic of the raw images. Street Views evoked an urgency I felt was present in earlier street photography. With its supposedly neutral gaze, the Street View photography had a spontaneous quality unspoiled by the sensitivities or agendas of a human photographer. It was tempting to see the images as a neutral and privileged representation of reality—as though the Street Views, wrenched from any social context other than geospatial contiguity, were able to perform true docu-photography, capturing fragments of reality stripped of all cultural intentions.
!!!
Do check out his images if you haven’t seen them already; they’re really stunning. And equally stunning, for me, is the image of Rafman at a computer, clicking through Google Street View—scouting, searching—a step at a time.
Invasion!
Pretty awesome alien cyborg warrior here:
Oh hey guess what IT’S A WATER FLEA. (And winner of the Olympus BioScapes image competition in 2009. I would not know how to judge this contest; all of the entrants are so stunning.)
Twenty-ten, we are so ready for you.
New things wrapped in the gauze of time
This is uncanny! Photographer Martin Becka dusted off a 150-year-old camera and pointed it at Dubai. (That’s a CNN gallery with a relatively good interface; there are more images on Becka’s site.)
I realize that “whoah, old cameras make things look old” isn’t a new insight, but wow, it’s just so apparent, so visceral, in this case. And it makes you pause and realize just how much of our experience of history—old history and new history, too!—is shaped by the filters and films of media we view it through and on.
(Via @GreatDismal.)
Future Picture
You remember Dan Reetz, right? He of the DIY book scanner. Well, now he’s launched another totally fascinating, zeitgeist-y project. This one, Future Picture, is all about computational photography.
What’s computational photography? I actually haven’t been able to come up with a good one-sentence description yet; maybe you can suggest one. Suffice it to say that computational photography lets you do things like snap a photo and then focus it after the fact. Or make three different versions, each focused on something different. It actually gets kinda close to the classic let-me-just-enhance-that movie effect.
It’s related, at least philosophically, to James Cameron’s production technique for Avatar: rather than make your creative decisions up front—which way is the camera pointing? How fast is it moving? Where are the lights?—you delay them as long as possible. You capture the rawest data possible—huge torrents of it—and then rely on computers to manipulate and transform it later.
I’ll bet you could come up with some cool stuff by applying this approach to wildly different (and seemingly-incompatible) domains. Cooking? Health care? Relationships? Think abouuut it…
Making friends with a leopard seal
“And then I think she realized that I was this useless predator in her ocean, probably going to starve to death. […] She started to bring me weak penguins, dead penguins.”
Are those photos unreal or what? Worth watching in HD for sure. (And good format, yeah? Simple but effective.)
(Thanks Len!)
Aloft
Superman in a windbreaker, via the Guardian.
I spotted the photo at BLDGBLOG, so while I’m here, I’ll also point you to his new post called Messianic Urbanism:
The idea that the Second Coming of a messianic figure—from any religion—will bring with it enormous traffic-engineering concerns is something that had not, in fact, occurred to me.
Blade Runner in San Francisco
This Flickr gallery created by Britta Gustafson is a delight. She imagines Blade Runner set in San Francisco—which was of course the setting of Philip K. Dick’s original story “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep.”
In the reimagined movie, where does Deckard live? How about creepy gene-engineer J. F. Sebastian? All the answers are here.
“Such a pretty city! All it needs is a few gratuitous fireballs.”
I love this genre. More movie location-scouting via Flickr, please.
The crazy dramatic life of a drop of water
Who knew it was such a saga? A rain drop hits a puddle. What happens? Apparently, Shakespeare happens: struggle, suspense, surprise. Multiple acts. And finally, of course… tragedy.






