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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Forty-Five: Using clouds to imply meaning > Mount Moran from Oxbow Bend, Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming, 2008
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07-OCT-2008

Mount Moran from Oxbow Bend, Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming, 2008

By framing Mount Moran vertically, I stress the flow of dark clouds that gather around its 12,600-foot high summit, as well as the reflection of its glacier in the Snake River below. A moment earlier, I photographed the same scene in a horizontal frame ( http://www.pbase.com/pnd1/image/104710882 ), eliminating most of the clouds and making the mountain larger in the process. These images express their ideas in differing ways – this vertical shot draws the eye from river to sky, while the horizontal shot sweeps across the mountain range and its reflection. This image expresses its idea through a vertical sweep of moisture -- we move from the river and its reflection, to the glacier, and finally to the rain laden clouds overhead. Without those clouds, the scene would not be as expressive.

Leica V-Lux 1
1/800s f/8.0 at 18.2mm iso100 full exif

other sizes: small medium large original auto
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Phil Douglis23-Jun-2010 19:23
Thanks, Elizabeth, for your comment, and for coming to my instructional galleries. I hope they will be of use to you.
Elizabeth Burns23-Jun-2010 12:38
OMG I saw this cruising thru your clouds and am amazed....brillant.voted
Phil Douglis24-Oct-2008 00:54
It is fascinating how this image reminds you of time travel, while the horizontal version, featuring the same subject matter, reminds you of a wound. So much can happen in our imaginations to alter perception and change meaning.
JSWaters23-Oct-2008 02:53
I like Tim's suggestion of cycles of weather. I get a feeling of time travel. The foreground cloud cover so close it serves as the top of a tunnel I travel through into the image.
Jenene
Phil Douglis18-Oct-2008 22:39
You are right, Tim -- weather is cyclical, and so is this image. Good point.
Tim May18-Oct-2008 21:36
Without the clouds the whole cycle wouldn't work. Those dark clouds suggest the cycle of the effects of weather on our world.
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