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Monday, June 29, 2009

Not clouds at all


Reach for the sky
Shanghai, China, May 2007 [Click all images to enlarge]

When I was in China a couple of years back for a conference, I made it a habit every morning to wander to the top floor of my hotel and shoot the early morning skyline. This place was so far removed from my reality that I felt compelled to cut into my sleep to suck in as much as I possibly could.

I felt like a sniper, sitting quietly in my deserted perch while the city came alive below and across from me. I knew the sun had already risen because the sky had brightened considerably. But the sun itself was hidden behind a choking blanket of smog that rose at least 10 degrees above the horizon. So rather than time my arrival to the official sunrise time (I think it was around 4:30 local time), I simply sat myself down just after 5 and waited until the sun found a break in the smoggy clouds.

As scary as this level of pollution was, I was almost ashamed to admit that it made for some stunningly beautiful early morning scenery. For all the sadness I felt as I watched a city live beneath this choking blanket, it remains a time and a place I'll never forget.

Your turn: Pollution as beauty. Please discuss.

7 comments:

  1. I remember from the olympics how smoggy etc it was in China. But it does make beautiful pictures. At least they are okay for your health

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  2. Wow. Wow at the beauty of the photos. Wow at all that junk in the sky. We are so lucky here.

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  3. I guess you take art where you can find it, but I was getting short of breath just looking at the photo. "Choking" is precisely the word I'd have used to describe it.

    Sadly, I can't imagine the scene improving. Between them, China and India are on pace to build several hundred new coal-fired power plants in the next few years, which could raise the levels of greenhouse gases sufficiently the melt down both polar caps before I reach retirement age.

    I wonder if that will make my house beachfront property? Or -- since I only live 125 miles inland -- will it make it submarine property?

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  4. Whoa.. that's some serious pollution. It does indeed make for a lovely shot.. but yuck!

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  5. Your "man-made cloud" spin on the theme gave me a whole other idea for a finale. So to wind up this week I offer:

    Thematic Photographic 55: "Cloudy" v.7.0

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  6. You are most fortunate to have travelled there, Carmi and I'm sure the kids will ask you "What was China like?" when they are old enough. I see in this photo "poetential" for continued "business as usual" or going Green and allowing the beauty of architecture and the sky to show through! :)

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