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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Twenty Nine: The Layered Image – accumulating meaning > Chili Ristra and Lilliums, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 2005
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16-JUL-2005

Chili Ristra and Lilliums, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 2005

I arranged the three layers of this image along a diagonal axis, starting with the unformed blossom in the lower right corner, representing a life yet to be experienced. A second layer evolves directly above it, as a plant explodes into a brilliantly colored double bloom. Its green stems also sprout several shadowy blossoms to come, as well as fly the tattered banners of blossoms past. These Lilliums, which grow in the courtyard of the Santa Fe Museum of Fine Arts, symbolize the life cycle in itself – yet the image adds still another level of meaning as it moves to the third layer – a softly focused chili ristra (a bunch of dried red peppers). The ristra, a decorative icon of the American Southwest, is partially in shadow, hanging in the darkness, and providing contrast to the flowers in scale, color, texture, and meaning. These peppers were once alive, yet acquire their purpose in death. If not shellacked, they can still be used to bring fire to the palate, and ultimately offer a symbol of hospitality to all who shall pass under its shadow.

Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ20
1/500s f/4.6 at 35.5mm iso80 hide exif
Full EXIF Info
Date/Time16-Jul-2005 21:15:53
MakePanasonic
ModelDMC-FZ20
Flash UsedNo
Focal Length35.5 mm
Exposure Time1/500 sec
Aperturef/4.6
ISO Equivalent80
Exposure Bias1.00
White Balance (10)
Metering Modemulti spot (3)
JPEG Quality (6)
Exposure Programprogram (2)
Focus Distance

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Phil Douglis24-Jul-2005 00:50
Hi, Catriona,

The first layer was identified as the caption as "the unformed blossom in the lower right hand corner." Sorry if I was unclear on that. The second layer is the rest of the plant, alive, dead, and forming blooms alike. And the third layer is the Ristra. You must have seen the first two layers as a single layer. I felt the single unformed blossom in the lower right hand corner was vivid enough in coloration to comprimse its own layer, both visually and in terms of meaning. Thanks, Catriona, for enjoying this one with me.
Guest 24-Jul-2005 00:31
I looked at this image before reading your explanation of it and identified 2 layers. As you can imagine, I was interested in your first few words ... "I arranged the three layers of this image..."! So before reading on I looked again at the image to find that 3rd layer I had missed!

The 2 layers I see in this image are the Lillium (the bloom, new buds and older petals) as the forground layer in the sun symbolising the lifecycle and the ristra in the darker softly focussed background layer symbolising death. You have positioned the layers so that the viewer is drawn from the bottm right to the lop left of the image. Three layers or two, the image works because of the incongruities, colour, texture that you have captured.
Phil Douglis23-Jul-2005 23:14
Thanks, Marisa, for assuring me that a hot chili can wake up the dead! I like the way you use that bit of Argentine folk wisdom to bear on the way I construct this image. I layered this image to express the cycle of life, and you vividly respond to my intentions by adding your own interpretation of the lightness meeting the darkness, the relationship of the unborn blossoms to the dead dry peppers, and the fire of red, the color of life itself, smoldering within the dead chili. It is all inter-related, united, going round and round, isn't it? And it does so because of I've tried to use layers to accumulate and express meaning here. And thank you for identifying the flowers for me as Lilliums, too. I've edited my title and caption accordingly.
Guest 23-Jul-2005 21:47
Every part of the life itself (including death, because death is a part of the life) has its own beauty and its own purpose, and this picture is a beautiful reminder of that truth. The way you compose this picture is really exquisite, with the black background that plays a huge part in the meaning of this photograph. Light and darkness meet again, and in the middle... the life itself in the shape of this wonderful orange liliums and the red chilli. Since the unborn flower till the dried -dead?- chilli we can see life in all its stages.
And you wrote something interesting in the caption: you talk about the fire of those red chilli, and here we have fire, red and life again! Here it is said that the savor of a chilli can bring the death ones into life again...
Everything united, again!
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