Sun, Nov 17, 2:28 PM CST

Neon Abstract: # 5

Photography Abstract posted on Aug 02, 2010
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Description


Though all of my Neon Abstracts are numbered rather than named, I was tempted to call this one “Nova Swing” in reference to a brilliant science fiction novel that somehow reminds me of this image. The novel in question, what I’d call the authentic Nova Swing, is the most-recent (to my knowledge) piece of science fiction by the British writer, M. John Harrison. It’s the quirky, wildly inventive, and snazzy follow-up to the quirky, wildly inventive and snazzy novel Light. Harrison has been around for a while, but I’ve known of his works for only a short time. He’s quite well known for a series of interconnected and oddly recursive short novels that take place in the fictional city of Viriconium. Though well-known (and apparently well-loved by UK audiences) Viriconium did not reach American attention until the omnibus collection, known simply as Viriconium appeared with little fanfare on the shelves of Borders Books in the USA. Viriconium as an omnibus collection is essentially Harrison’s large-scale introduction to American readers, and a nice re-introduction to UK readers, as this omnibus contains a number of shorter, and previously unpublished Viriconium works. Also, for those interested, Viriconium is one of those marvelous and phantasmagorical world-cities that takes its rightful place beside New Crubozon, Bellona (the Samuel R. Delany Bellona and not the real one) and…yeah, I’ll just go on and say it, Pekkur (or Agara, the country stretched around Pekkur like…well…whatever Agara is like.) Where Viriconium is dark and oddly recursive, Light is as brilliant as its name implies, and its follow-up, Nova Swing is a wonderful noir-ish SF bebop fever-dream on steroids, laughing gas, and a touch of something vaguely radioactive. It’s my kinda book. I can’t say that this particular Neon Abstract has very much to do with the work of M. John Harrison. It has nothing to do with Nova Swing. The name, however, seems to fit—at least in my brain. The image itself, is derived from light-streaks I’d created a couple of weeks ago, while wandering around (at night) with Corey. I’d gotten it into my mind to create a number of such abstracts, but I needed more stock. I was tired of night-time neon, sodium-vapor streetlight, and the headlights/tail-lights of cars, and so I decided to shift my focus to something else: mercury vapor parking lot lights, fluorescent light from various windows, and whatever other light sources I could find and substantially blur. As I tweaked and layered and layered and tweaked this image, I thought of Nova Swing simply because the pattern emerging from the large amount of postwork came to remind me of a variable star throwing off it’s outer layers. That’s where the nova bit came in. The hypothetical star in question wasn’t swinging, but oh well…Nova Swing stuck in my mind and so there you have it: the officially unofficial name of this image. I liked the complexity that emerged from the number of layer-copies I’d stacked one on top of the other—rotating, rotating, and rotating each successive layer, and though I liked the initial color combination, I decided to “warm it up” a bit, though I’m glad I kept it cooler than the first couple of images in this particular category. (The only real postwork in this image is layer-repetition, layer-mode tweaking, and a bit of contrast/saturation twiddling...and not much else. The idea in this series is to let the camera and jiggling motion do most of the work.) As always, I hope that you enjoy this image (at least half as much as I enjoyed making it) and I hope that you’re all having a great week. And again, a BIG thank you for the birthday greetings and dedications I’ve received, and for any comments this little neon doohickey gets.

Comments (21)


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MagikUnicorn

8:26PM | Mon, 02 August 2010

Beautiful design ;-)

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clbsmiley

8:44PM | Mon, 02 August 2010

Cool one :)

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jocko500

9:28PM | Mon, 02 August 2010

you know how to move with the camera to make wonderful patterns . real cool shot

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Sepiasiren

10:27PM | Mon, 02 August 2010

gasp blink blink--evocative--PROvocative--just emotive and sexy--love this!!!!

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beachzz

10:44PM | Mon, 02 August 2010

Wow, I'd love to know how this started--it just keeps going and going and I could get lost in it!!

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kgb224

12:53AM | Tue, 03 August 2010

Outstanding work my friend.

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myrrhluz

1:10AM | Tue, 03 August 2010

This is really cool and blazing hot at the same time. Like the music of the spheres, this is the dance of the suns, intricate and interweaving. It looks like a dance, but what a complicated and perfectly executed one. (I was going to say dance of the stars but then a TV show popped into my head and I decided suns was better) Beautiful patterns and light! More books of interest! I just got a box of books from Amazon. (Oh joy, oh rapture!) I can't buy anymore for a little while. (sigh)

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helanker

2:02AM | Tue, 03 August 2010

A very beautiful Neon abstract. I like very much the flame ring near the center. I adds to it. I think I can hear this humming :)

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durleybeachbum

2:33AM | Tue, 03 August 2010

Well, I love the image and the tale of how you did it, and I've to add yet another author to the waiting list of yet to read!

lucindawind

7:11AM | Tue, 03 August 2010

fantastic abstract ! very sizzly :) < is that a word ? lol

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flavia49

7:46AM | Tue, 03 August 2010

marvelous composition!!

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MrsRatbag

8:47AM | Tue, 03 August 2010

Yes, sizzling is a good descriptor; maybe hissing and sizzling? Beautiful work, Chip!

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jmb007

9:22AM | Tue, 03 August 2010

beau travail!

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sandra46

4:33PM | Tue, 03 August 2010

another stunning piece of this series! i like how you work on this neon!

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Osper

7:27PM | Tue, 03 August 2010

Neato, like a ceiling in a great cathedral!!

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danapommet

11:04PM | Tue, 03 August 2010

WOW!!! I would have loved to have seen you shoot this one and then put it all together. Dana

minos_6

1:22AM | Wed, 04 August 2010

Each time you post one of these you seem to have upped your game considerably. This is by far my favourite in the series to date. It does have a cooler edge, and the intricacy is amazing. This could be an alien stained glass window. Or a portal to another dimension, or to a parallel universe. It could be a time-delayed image of plasma trails of a number of space-faring vehicles, sailing in symmetry across the oceans of the cosmos. This is incredible, and I love it! Whilst I've heard of Light and Nova Swing, I've never read the author, so I've made a note to look him up.

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auntietk

9:03AM | Thu, 05 August 2010

Oh man ... this is like Spirograph on Jazz! Fabulous!! I'm loving this series.

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praep

11:48PM | Mon, 09 August 2010

Thats really gorgeous - pure music...

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mbz2662

8:33PM | Sat, 14 August 2010

For some reason, I have missed your neon abstracts. I am correcting that right now. :)

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icerian

8:31AM | Wed, 25 August 2010

Another great work!


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Photograph Details
F Numberf/2.7
MakeCanon
ModelCanon PowerShot A1000 IS
Shutter Speed10/10
ISO Speed80
Focal Length6

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