Showing posts with label museums. Show all posts
Showing posts with label museums. Show all posts

Thursday, March 27, 2014

The Island of the Pelicans

Innocent sounding enough, but Native Americans avoided it, believing it to be cursed.  Early Spanish explorers initially called it La Isla de los Alcatraces, after the flocks of migratory birds that nest there; it would later be known simply as Alcatraz.  First a lighthouse, then a military garrison and prison, and finally, and most infamously, a federal prison housing only the most troublesome inmates who had a penchant for escape elsewhere.

Even during one of the most beautiful days I've ever experienced in San Francisco and amidst the throngs of tourists, there's something unsettling and eerie about the place.  Beyond the rumors of it being haunted, it's bleak and cold.  The natural light that streamed into the cell block created harsh contrasts and the incandescent lighting inside the cells themselves cast a sickly yellow tinge upon everything and everyone inside them.  It was a stark contrast to the glorious weather outside.

Perhaps the highlight of the trip was meeting an actual former prisoner, Bill Baker.  He has written a book about his experience and happened to be on-island during our visit.  We were fortunate enough to get signed copies and ask some questions... of course the boyfriend being far more thoughtful than I, asked the better question: What would you have mailed yourself, if you could have? He responded hilariously that he would have mailed himself either a pretty woman or a speedboat to get off the island.  It's amazing to me that he was able to maintain good spirits and humor despite all of that time locked up in a bleak environment not optimized to actually rehabilitate anyone.

Freedom and captivity
Welcome to Alcatraz
Cell blocks
A key hanging from the gun gallery
On any other island, it would just be a glorious day.  On Alcatraz, it further underscores the dilapidation.
So close, yet so far.
More

Active Shooting Hours: 4
Review Hours: 2
Hours to Date: 132

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Halls of Science

72 Nobel prizes, 15 Turing Awards, discovery of 16 elements on the periodic table (more than any other university in the world... Go Bears!), University of California, Berkeley and Berkeley Labs are collectively a heavy hitter when it comes to scientific discovery, research, and contribution.  And then, of course, there's the California Academy of Science... natural history museum by day, club and bar for the scientifically-minded on Thursday nights with its Nightlife events.  Aside from the nostalgia of revisiting old stomping grounds, I wanted to to capture the exploratory, innovative, and erudite spirit of these places in an image.

This was a tough endeavor since the lighting in both places were harsh.  At Berkeley, it was early afternoon with the sun bearing down and buildings created shadow, which resulted in unwanted shadows.  At the Academy of Science, there was harsh overhead lighting in the rainforest exhibit and no flash photography allowed anywhere.  Not to mention people everywhere in both places... and not helpful crowds blending in the background to add to the scene, but random individuals wearing obnoxiously bright and distracting floral patterns that distracted the eye.

Not as successful as I would have liked, but I still managed to have a great time... of course, the drinks at Nightlife helped with that!!

Looking from North side back towards the Campinile... otherwise known as how engineers see campus.
The lighting of this photo is all off since the background is in bright sunlight and the foreground has the bear statues in the shadow of the building to the right.  Opening the aperture or slowing shutter speed resulted in blown out sky and bears that were in shadow.  I'm not sure this could have been corrected with just the camera given the natural light and short of waiting for the sun to be in the right spot at the right time.  Even with a neutral density filter that would tint the sky and not the ground, the vertical lamppost and the Campanile itself would be exposed incorrectly since they both would cross the neutral density filter line.  Tricky.

Pterodactyl in the Valley Life Sciences Building
Rainforest dome in the California Academy of Science... it was 80 degrees and 80% humidity in there!
Monster of the deep.
Looking up.
More Science

Active Shooting Hours: 1.5
Review Hours: 1
Hours to Date: 124.5

Monday, January 13, 2014

Traveling Back in Time

Last Saturday, I wandered the halls of the LA County Museum of Natural History in search of dinosaurs.  At the La Brea Tar Pits, there were numerous signs adamantly stating that the exhibits there were in the ~20,000 thousand years ago and that there were no dinosaurs there.  I really wonder how many times people needed to ask that they felt the need to bold and underscore it on multiple signs in multiple places. 

In any case, the Museum of Natural History is apparently the largest of its kind in the western part of the United States and houses nearly 35 million specimens and artifacts that cover ~4.5 billion years of history.  Even with almost 3 hours, I made it only through probably a third of their exhibits and will definitely have to head back to look at the other exhibits and the architecture of the building itself.  The only disappointing thing is that I find photographing museum exhibits indoors to be somewhat discouraging, since the glass frequently causes a reflection and ruins the best of photos.  The best pictures I get are generally things that are just in the open air and under natural light.

Now that I've gotten the first 100 hours under my belt, I think I'm going to stop focusing so much on subject based photography and start working on technique with specific areas like composition, lighting, color, etc.  And a series taken with just a regular point and shoot to force me to practice some of these elements.  Taking it up to the next level!!

A battle of Jurassic proportions
Immense and bizarre indeed!
From under the rotunda
Active Shooting Hours: 2
Review Hours: 1
Hours to Date: 105

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

100 Hours

Reaching a milestone is a funny thing.  Leading up to it, there's nothing but breathless exhilaration and excitement.  This past weekend, having finally gotten to the 100th hour and clicked it away, the moment was just like every other hour - looking at the world with a keen eye for an interesting subject.

I meant to focus the majority of my time and this series on the La Brea Tar Pits and the Page Museum, but many of the exhibits are behind glass or are lit in a way (harshly, unevenly, etc.) that couldn't be corrected for by moving my position.  Luckily, the boyfriend and I were both feeling spontaneous and wanted to get the most out of our trip, especially after navigating through LA traffic.  Given that fact, we ended up wandering around LACMA and ended our night with seeing Frozen at the El Capitan Theatre in Hollywood.

Dire Wolf Skulls at the Page Museum in Los Angeles
Methane bubbling up through tar at the La Brea Tar Pits
The crescent moon over the Urban Light installation at LACMA, which is right next to the La Brea Tar Pits.  
202 restored lamps in total and many used to light up streets in Southern California.
The bright marquee of the El Capitan Theatre.
More LA

Active Shooting Hours: 2
Review Hours: 1
Hours to Date: 102