Mon, Dec 23, 1:42 PM CST

I Can Explain

Photography Abstract posted on Jun 14, 2009
Open full image in new tab Zoom on image
Close

Hover over top left image to zoom.
Click anywhere to exit.


Members remain the original copyright holder in all their materials here at Renderosity. Use of any of their material inconsistent with the terms and conditions set forth is prohibited and is considered an infringement of the copyrights of the respective holders unless specially stated otherwise.

Description


I can imagine your reaction. Having taken this photo at the National World War I Museum in Kansas City, I still had to dope out just what we are looking at here. I am standing on a polished marble floor a few feet from a bridge of acrylic, see-through flooring. The see-through bridge spans a poppy field one level below made to look like a slice of a WWI field in Flanders. The see-through floor also is reflecting a glass ceiling above, through which you can observe the 217' tower with eternal flame...backed by a blue sky with some puffy white clouds. Now, can you see all that??? There are 9,000 artificial poppies. Each poppy represents 1,000 combat deaths in WWI (or the Great War as it was called prior to WWII). Doing the math that is 9,000,000! Lest we forget. This museum was dedicated in 1921 but completely redone and reopened in 2004. Well worth a visit if you ever get to Kansas City. Thanks so very much for all your comments and favorites. Bill:)

Comments (39)


)

auntietk

2:39AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

You were right ... I love this! What a fabulous thing. I'm so happy you saw this and thought to photograph it. My brain is in a twist, even knowing what I'm looking at! Awesome image, my friend.

)

Doriutz

2:46AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Fantastic shot, Bill. I can see all those thinks in your shot. First I wanted to see if I can understand. The poppy are too small, and first the eye can see only red spots, but when you look at full size everything is clear. So many artificial poppies… Amazing! :)

)

PSDuck

3:43AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Wow, what an eye-tease!

)

bimm3d

3:54AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

gorgeous!!!

)

drace68

4:07AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

What an effect! Great capture, Bill.

)

wonderworld

4:11AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Very cool image!!!!!

)

blinkings

4:20AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Wonderful Bill. Our War Memorial has a similar concept where the walls are made to symbolize the sides of trenches. free image host
Free Image Hosting by ImageBam.com

)

durleybeachbum

4:23AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Stunning, Bill! A favourite!

)

GBCalls

4:35AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Pretty interesting. Excellent photo with your explanation.

)

lyron

5:45AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Amazing. Excellent shot!!

)

bugatti

5:51AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

good shot ... grandfather was a career officer (italian army) and died in 1924 as a distant consequence of war wounds, so I imagine he's not counted in the poppies ... Father was wounded and given for dead in 1917, but he survived almost to his 90th birthday (I wouldn't be writing this otherwise) so maybe he was counted, and settles the balance ...

)

morningglory

6:50AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Turned out great. Cool shot.

skipper62

7:23AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Great shot. I still am not sure what I'm looking at but I like what I see. Still have problems so will comment of the Italian Fighters here also.. Excellent. There was one at the Warbird's fly in a couple years back. Nice bird. Cheers, skipper

)

CavalierLady

7:40AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Like an optical illusion! Great find and capture, Bill.... very unique... well done!!

PD154

9:18AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Well seen and captured Bill, great info too!!

)

Rainastorm

10:15AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Incredibly cool image...:-)

)

beachzz

10:23AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

OMG, it's way too early for this, the coffee hasn't even begun to kick in--but what an incredible shot. More incredible is the concept and the idea--thanks for sharing!!

)

Autumn_Rains

10:52AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

The loss of so many, translated in to such beauty.. every thankful for those that gave so we can have Great shot. and love the pov you got with this!!!!

)

MrsRatbag

11:08AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Such a fantastic image! Well done you!

)

KarmaSong

11:21AM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Superb capture: the light seems to be playing with every single detail of what's inside and outside the building. Excellent photography!

)

flavia49

12:12PM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Fantastic shot!!! Really the numbers are impressive! Some years ago Sandra and I, we went to the Somme Battlefield. There you can see hills after hills dotted by white crosses or marble tombstones all over around till the horizon line! There are million soldiers buried there! Such a moving view and a memento for all of us!

)

jendellas

1:05PM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Wow, must be fabulous to see that. Great shot, loveing the pics & history.

)

MagikUnicorn

1:44PM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Multi-reflectional Light ;-) Superb POV

)

kansas

1:59PM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Thanks for the explanation. Now I can understand what this photo is. Amazing.

)

Richardphotos

4:46PM | Sun, 14 June 2009

well seen and outstanding shot Bill

)

sandra46

4:52PM | Sun, 14 June 2009

sublime photo, Bill!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Unfortunately it was called Great War because of the massacres. I can say that I live in a region were WW1 was left more stories than WW2 even when I was a child!

)

goodoleboy

5:50PM | Sun, 14 June 2009

A stunning exercise in lighting effects, geometry and textures, Bill! Without your explanation I would have been lost at sea trying to figure out this composition.

)

anahata.c

7:02PM | Sun, 14 June 2009

well I at least caught up to the last image, and this is a beautiful 'abstract' made out of real images layered in glass, floor, etc. Yep, it's a mind-bender, but it can be seen as a pure abstract too, what photographers look for; so with all your explanations, we get two photos: the actual things we're seeing & the luminous abstract you wrested out of it. It's beautiful. And oddly—and I can't explain why—both your shot & the museum itself seems fitting for the war it commemorates...this won't be easy to verbalize...because while the imagery isn't early 20th C (it's late 20th C.), it feels like quiet poetry; and the juxtaposition of flowers with delicate light & glass, etc, creates a sense of the first "world" war—emphasis on 'world', many communities & cultures, a merging of all Europe in one (horrible) place. The museum & this capture poeticizes that horrible war with a fragile poem of light, reflection & grace. (It was an astonishingly bad war, considering it started for such petty reasons, w/ no huge despot to overthrow, no massive state threatening all of Europe); with staggering numbers, yes, just astonishingly bad; and hard to fathom that Europe could've allowed another war so soon after.) Beautiful shot; and thanks for the explanations too.

)

Sea_Dog

7:06PM | Sun, 14 June 2009

Absolutely stunning! An amazing capture. Well done.

)

npauling

8:58PM | Sun, 14 June 2009

How magical, and what a great memorial, but oh what a lot of lost lives.

  • 1
  • 2

4 81 0

Photograph Details
F Numberf/3.2
MakeOLYMPUS IMAGING CORP.
ModelE-30
Shutter Speed1/800
ISO Speed200
Focal Length12

02
Days
:
10
Hrs
:
17
Mins
:
28
Secs
Premier Release Product
DZ XMas 2024 Set 2 for G8M
3D Figure Assets
Top-Selling Vendor Sale Item
$17.95 USD 50% Off
$8.98 USD

Privacy Notice

This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.