Zum Inhalt der Seite gehen


Wind Turbines, near Tracy, CA, 2010.

All the pixels, arranged neatly in a row, at https://www.flickr.com/photos/mattblaze/4491948497

#photography
A row of wind turbines on a rolling hilltop, framed in a way that resembles a histogram.
This was captured near the Tesla substation (no relation to the car company) near Altamont Pass with a DSLR and a 400mm lens, compressing the turbines in a way that made them resemble a histogram.

There's a *lot* of power being generated in those hills. The was an audible hum in the air and vibrations could be felt in the ground. In some spots, the camera rebooted from induced currents.

Infrastructure like this is easy to ignore, but has an accidental beauty that I think is worth examining.
The scale of these wind farms is beyond what we're equipped to process in day-to-day human experience. They conquer the landscape in ways we can't fully comprehend even when they're in front of us. In a sense, they're abstract sculptures of themselves, mostly visible in fleeting glances from interstate highways or airplane windows.
I both love and hate that there’s nothing in the shot to give a sense of scale. No ladder or human sized door, or truck/car
We had a SNES driving game that had wind turbines marching along the highway in SoCal. They dwarfed the cars. @mattblaze