SCENES FROM A LIBERATED BAGHDAD
December 2, 2006 3:36 AM Subscribe
War Photography Visual insight and more from the photographer Simon Norfolk.
He's great. This is one of my favorite shots by him, from Afghanastan.
He gets a little of the same criticism that Sebastiao Salgado does -- making formally beautiful scenes out of devastating surroundings -- but when the end result is that it makes you look, it works. Particularly when (as with the balloon vendor) he captures a bit of culture-transcending humanity.
posted by lisa g at 11:00 AM on December 2, 2006
He gets a little of the same criticism that Sebastiao Salgado does -- making formally beautiful scenes out of devastating surroundings -- but when the end result is that it makes you look, it works. Particularly when (as with the balloon vendor) he captures a bit of culture-transcending humanity.
posted by lisa g at 11:00 AM on December 2, 2006
Powerful. The staircase at Auschwitz: last steps for how many feet...?
Also see BLDGBLOG's earlier post, Rooms of Algebraic Theology, about Simon Norfolk's supercomputer photos [see his Supercomputers gallery]. More about the godlike MareNostrum computer in the Barcelona Supercomputing Center^, including other Norfolk photos [click for high-res versions.]
BTW, the BCS is looking fora The SysAdmin.
posted by cenoxo at 11:16 AM on December 2, 2006
Also see BLDGBLOG's earlier post, Rooms of Algebraic Theology, about Simon Norfolk's supercomputer photos [see his Supercomputers gallery]. More about the godlike MareNostrum computer in the Barcelona Supercomputing Center^, including other Norfolk photos [click for high-res versions.]
BTW, the BCS is looking for
posted by cenoxo at 11:16 AM on December 2, 2006
Norfolk's comment about Roman roads underlying London streets is striking:
posted by cenoxo at 11:32 AM on December 2, 2006
Crucially, it needs to be understood that the road system built by the Romans was their highest military technology, their equivalent of the stealth bomber or the Apache helicopter – a technology that allowed a huge empire to be maintained by a relatively small army, that could move quickly and safely along these paved, all-weather roads. It is extraordinary that London, a city that ought to be shaped by Tudor kings, the British Empire, Victorian engineers and modern international Finance, is a city fundamentally drawn, even to this day, by abandoned Roman military hardware.And here walk all we upon the streets of DARPA...
posted by cenoxo at 11:32 AM on December 2, 2006
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"They're all shot at 4am"
Amazing photography is all about getting up early in the morning. Damn.
posted by algreer at 4:12 AM on December 2, 2006