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Lux Aeterna

Photography Objects posted on Oct 03, 2009
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Description


I’ve seen this many times since my return to the windy city. It’s one of the many sculptures in the Museum Campus, and I’m surprised that I actually got it on a blue-sky kind of day. All-too-often, Chicago is a gray and overcast place, not quite as damp as some exotic, non-bovine city like Seattle, and so not as friendly to woodlice as I’d like it, though it’s damp enough for them, if lawns and gardens and compost heaps are kept nicely moist. (Chicago is a cow-city, a post-industrial, post-social worshipper of the not-exactly-golden calf of ancient near Semitic mythology. Its weather often resembles a bolus of grass with all of the color chewed out of it.) And yet, on a day, a Saturday not that long ago, there was sunlight, and a happy smear of blue above the fluff of speeding clouds. Marilyn and Tara had been here since the previous Thursday. Cheri, Dave, and Dave’s mom, Juanita were in for the day. Corey and Mark and I were here…as if there could be anywhere else for us to go! And the sun came out. We’d made a strangely circuitous journey to the Museum Campus along the shores of Lake Michigan and found a sculpture garden full of fallen moons, strange globes, and bouncy-recycled rubber surfaces. The Field Museum of Natural History, John G. Shedd Aquarium, and Adler Planetarium loomed around us like displaced temples. Fittingly, we passed this angular up-thrust of geometry on the way to the grounds of the Adler Planetarium. There were three of them, if I recall correctly, but this is the one that drew my attention. Its proportions remind me of the featureless black monoliths featured in Stanley Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke’s 2001: a space odyssey. I don’t know if that resemblance is intentional, but hey…the proportions are right. The only thing absent were pre-human apes scampering around, gaining enlightenment (and learning how to use weapons) while Gyorgy Legetti’s Lux Aeterna crooned in the background. I like that movie a lot, and in homage to my favorite scenes, I touched the sculpture. Nothing happened though; I didn’t learn how to turn bones into weapons, nor did I set off that alien burglar alarm that made way for a journey to Jupiter undertaken Dave Bowman, Frank Poole, and HAL-900. I did touch a piece of art, however. It was cold, as expected, and strangely insubstantial. It’s a hollow sculpture, I think, and so not nearly as impressive as the featureless black shapes that always preceded one of humanity’s dubious evolutionary leaps. As I sit writing this, I am immersed in the sound of Legetti’s haunting composition. I have come to love this sculpture because of the music I now associate with it. Now, if only I’d stopped to learn this sculpture’s name! *** As always, thank you for reading, viewing and commenting, and hopefully everyone is having a great weekend.

Comments (15)


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elfin14doaks

9:18PM | Sat, 03 October 2009

Chip I remember this so well and I think there were a few ape like beings walking around that day LOL. Then there were the people who rolled along on the segways. This is a great shot and now I have the music stuck in my head.

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KatesFriend

9:30PM | Sat, 03 October 2009

The parallel with Kubrick's monoliths (Clarke's description in the novel differs in proportions and, in one instance, transparency) is quite apt. This thing does look terribly alien and might well just swallow you up without even meaning to. I recently listened to an analysis (on YouTube) of why Kubrick chose the elongated dimensions of his monoliths from that of Clarke's intensions. He made them "taller" not just to appear more imposing but also instill an eerie sense of familiarity. The film monoliths mimic the dimensions of the letter box screen upon which the movie was meant to be viewed. In most scene the monoliths appear upright so there is no direct visual correlation, but human eyes pick up on such effects to warn us of strange situations. A visual prank if you will and very effective.

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MrsRatbag

9:41PM | Sat, 03 October 2009

Me, I love the geometry of this piece; an upright chessboard for the eyes, a feast of repetitive squares moving up into the sky. Nicely captured, Chip!

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-seek-

10:19PM | Sat, 03 October 2009

very nice!

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bimm3d

11:07PM | Sat, 03 October 2009

wonderful photo!!!!!!!!!

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RobyHermida

11:46PM | Sat, 03 October 2009

FANTASTIC!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ROBY

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Meisiekind

1:11AM | Sun, 04 October 2009

Wonderful POV in this most pleasing geometrical image Chip! The play of light and shadow is a feast! And of course - your narrative is food for the soul! I do so feel that I missed out so much for not being in Chicago with you all! We will have to re-do it at some stage!

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durleybeachbum

12:01PM | Sun, 04 October 2009

So often when I read your narratives I feel strangely illiterate! All these things things I've not yet heard, or read or tried! A great pic of what appears to be an arctitectonic object.

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Xantipa

12:37PM | Sun, 04 October 2009

Superb..

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marybelgium

12:52PM | Sun, 04 October 2009

super !

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tennesseecowgirl

10:04PM | Sun, 04 October 2009

fantastic.

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beachzz

12:42AM | Tue, 06 October 2009

I walked right by this and didn't get a single shot--isn't amazing how we can do that? I'm so glad you did--this is just astounding in its geometry and simple beauty!!

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auntietk

9:25AM | Tue, 06 October 2009

Oooooohh ... lovely pov, standing right at the bottom and looking up. I must have been standing behind you, because my shots of this are from a slightly greater distance and a slightly more off-center angle. And of course I love what you've written. You have a way of creating a mood ... wonderful work!

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zoren

11:34AM | Wed, 07 October 2009

the pov of this interesting sculpture is imposing and dramatic ... and your most interesting narrative does help to conjure the possible creative intentions of the artist. very nice!

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francinechristophe

4:24AM | Thu, 05 November 2009

whouw ! I love it ! an the other last ones (short comment : just back from hospsital and tired)


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Photograph Details
F Numberf/2.7
MakeCanon
ModelCanon PowerShot A1000 IS
Shutter Speed1/1000
ISO Speed80
Focal Length6

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Mins
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