Thursday, July 31. 2014
Sometimes something is so colourful that it almost becomes painful to look at, ....ah that's better.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 942, Colourful' 1/125s f/20, ISO100 200mm
Wednesday, July 30. 2014
Does anyone remember mirror balls and disco's.
I was always reminded of little worlds with oceans of light and dark reflections of terrain. The sparkling points of lights tracing walls and ceilings like the projections in a planetarium are the stars in a world of a very different creator.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 941, Planet Club' 1/60s f/2.8 ISO2000 200mm
Tuesday, July 29. 2014
Putting a camera to my eye changes not only what I see through the lens but also changes the way I see when I'm not.
Something as simple as shallow depth of field is hard to describe to anyone who has not looked through lens or seen it in a photograph yet it's there all the time in everywhere we look waiting to be seen.
Even a can or two of soft drink 'Lift' sitting on the fence take on new appeal.
Thirsty?
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 940, Lift Sitting on the Bench' 1/1250s f/2.8 ISO400 200mm
Monday, July 28. 2014
When is a beach not a beach? When it's City Beach of course.
Smack bang in the middle of the city is block of beach sand sandwiched between highrise buildings and busy city streets.
Why is there a beach in the city? To play beach volleyball of course.
It's both very cool and very quirky this little patch of sports ground on the corner of Pirie and Frome Streets in the Adelaide CBD.
While on the courts you could be on a beach anywhere in Australia assuming you are focused on the game and not the glass and concrete horizon.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 939, City Beach' 1/40s f/2.8 ISO160 200mm
With recent local deaths all the issues we have been experiencing of out of control trucks coming down the South Eastern freeway and new speed restrictions I thought I go see for myself what the real impact has been.
I stood in the entrance of the down track tunnel for nearly an hour during which time a good number of trucks drove through on their way down into the city.
Every truck I observed was adhering to the reduced speed limit of 60KpH. Perfect for ghostly images like this.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 938, Ghostly Truckin' 1/40s f/2.8 ISO160 200mm
Saturday, July 26. 2014
This is an unashamed corporate annual report cover shot of the new University of South Australia's, 'Jeffrey Smart' building. All offers welcome!
Seriously though there is something about signs that has captured my attention of late and I really liked the way this vertical slab of blue emblazoned with logo and text stands out.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 937, Jeffrey Smart' 1/40s f/2.8 ISO160 200mm
Friday, July 25. 2014
Green and gold are Australia's official sporting colours so when the canola fields are blooming intersperse with wheat, beans and other green crops it's like a seasonal tribute to Australian sports.
For me I simply like the colours and textures and the amazing natural saturation of these not so subtle colours.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 936, Green and Gold' 1/2500s f/7.1 ISO320 200mm
Thursday, July 24. 2014
I was wondering what to write about this beautiful place and found myself singing lines of a song from 'The Sound of Music'.
Instead of raindrops on roses and whiskers on kittens I had stormclouds and soft light, and ripples on oceans... Well you get get what I mean.
This image of a brooding Rapid Bay not only captures some of my favorite things but reminds me to pursue them more often.
Unlike that song from the Austrian Alps I plan to do less remembering and more doing!!
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 935, My Favorite Things' 1/400s f/10 ISO100 31mm
Wednesday, July 23. 2014
Sure it's just a sign. Much like any sign really.
It carries the name of a famous Australian artist. No surprises there.
It states what the sign means to name. That's what signs do.
It's read by thousands of people daily but few have ever really seen it. The mark of a good sign.
Just a sign perhaps but today I made it a portrait.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 934, Just A Sign' 1.6 f/4.0 ISO160 130mm
Tuesday, July 22. 2014
This might be another Toy Soldiers Crew image but I'm not really sure. It's with a collection of their work but does not quite seem their style.
The thing that really caught my attention in this macabre portrait is the very striking resemblance to one of our national politicians.
Enough said.
Edit/Update ... the artist is Jayson Fox
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 933, Stark Raving Mad' 1/40s f/11 ISO160 17mm
Monday, July 21. 2014
This time of year here the local canola fields are blooming creating amazing blankets of saffron yellow across the landscape.
Interspersed between fields of wheat and peas and beans we can at least for now be certain that canola here in the Barossa Valley is non Genetically Modified.
This does not however mean I am against GMO as a means by which we shape our environment. We have been doing this already for thousands of years in less dramatic ways. Hand picking and cultivating or breeding plants and animals with traits we deem useful or pleasing has traditionally been our technology in achieving this transformation. So to me being against GMO because it is wrong is both naive and absurd simply because we have been doing it since the beginning of farming, perhaps the single biggest contributing factor to the creation of our modern, global civilization.
The real challenge as I see it is how to continue this technology in a way which benefits both us and our environment. The real risks as I see them are in big business steaming rolling unsafe iterations of GMOs into the environment in the interests of profit over sustainability or ecological disasters.
So being GMO free is not what we really want. It's simply a stop-guard for now until we have all worked out how to do it well, for all our sakes and for the sake our environment.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 932, GMO Free For Now' 1/1250s f/8 ISO100 200mm
Sunday, July 20. 2014
Unless the light was just right you would not even notice the gossamer fine threads snagged on the barbed wire. Notice it I did
I'm certain it is not there by design and wonder if the original web was caught in the wind and transported here.
The other thing I am sure of is that on I leaving this now immortalized thread ensnared barb, I will have seen it once and will never see it again.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 931, Only Once' 1/800s f/8 ISO320 135mm
Saturday, July 19. 2014
At a quick glance you might confuse this metallic textured dome with some perspectives of the new SAHMRI building on North Terrace.
I certainly could not help but notice the uncanny similarity with some of my own images.
Perhaps it could be a closeup of a stage microphone with artist belting out some tune just out of view.
It is of course neither of these as any drinker of real-leaf tea would recognise.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 930, Architectural Bubble' 0.3s f/16 ISO320 100mm
Friday, July 18. 2014
Contrary to rolling stones these stationary blocks have gathered a beautiful adornment of moss and I have to admit I really like this look where a human construction has become one with nature.
I wonder if this might start a trend in future architecture?
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 929, Stationary Stonework' 1/50s f/4 ISO160 200mm
Thursday, July 17. 2014
A combination of two of my favorite things, photography and coffee.
These beans won't last long. By tomorrow morning they will be ground and in a steaming brew by mid morning.
Coffee and photography. Why not.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 928, Coffography' 1s f/22 ISO320 100mm
What is it? It's actually iron but the gorgeous textures could just as easily be wood.
This very large piece of iron can be found on the banks of the Torrens River just behind the University of Adelaide.
From this perspective it is rather abstract but if you were to step back a little you would see a sculpture called 'Fugue' by local artist Greg Johns and commissioned back in 1997.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 927, Fugue Perspective' 1/13s f/14 ISO200 35mm
Wednesday, July 16. 2014
Did I mention I love tunnels?
Well I do and I still remember my first as vividly as if it were yesterday.
Yes I really I am talking about tunnels! For me, driving through a tunnel creates a strange combination of trepidation, the excitement of discovery, the rush of speed and a moment of feeling part of a bigger machine.
So you can imagine how excited I got many years ago when Adelaide decided to build its first real tunnel under part of the Mount Lofty Ranges, The Heysen Tunnels.
Still it's not as good as my first. I suspect none ever will be.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 926, Tunnel Love' 10s f/18 ISO160 70mm
Tuesday, July 15. 2014
Yet another striking Toy Soldiers Crew image just off down town Hindley Street.
I don't seem to get very far (geographically that is) when I go walking around the city looking for images
I think I spent a good 30 minutes here looking from different angles, trying to be clever. I even thought about removing the rubbish, the cigarette butts, the old Bounty Bar wrapper, the plastic cups and the rest of the urban dust.
In the end this image was only ever going to be right at you, all or nothing!
No Monkey business going on here excepts for Federico's
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 925, Monkey Business' 1/80s f/11 ISO160 17mm
Sunday, July 13. 2014
Snaking its way down to the Heysen Tunnel (just out of view), the South Eastern freeway is a grand way to come into Adelaide from the South East.
Every traveler from Melbourne To Adelaide would know this road well and thousands of Adelaide Hills commuters drive it daily.
Tonight it takes on a different personality in the soft light created by vehicles and road lighting.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 924, Light Canyon' 30s f/4.0 ISO800 70mm
Saturday, July 12. 2014
A bright colorful kite would have appeared out of place in this moody sky.
This dark shape, seemingly hanging by an inverted thread, feels right at home though.
It has been a long time since I flew a kite and this image reminds me how satisfying it was to begin a Saturday morning with some plastic sheeting, bamboo or dowel, tape and string and end the day with a beautiful flying creation.
I wonder if I can hang a camera from one?
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 923, Day 923, Hanging By A Thread' 1/640s f/5.6 ISO100 200mm
Friday, July 11. 2014
Another wonderful mural tucked away in a carpark off of Hindley Street ins Adelaide.
Again I am not sure who the artist is so anyone who does please let me know.
It's hard to do justice to this pieces without a really large screen, or better still how about a large brick wall in an inner city carpark!!
Just don't stay longer than 4 hours.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 922, 4P Permit Parking' 1/20s f/11 ISO640 70mm
Thursday, July 10. 2014
What has the new Jeffrey Smart building on Hindley Street to do with four poets?
The three on the right create beautiful words, the one on the left creates beautiful images.
On this night the building is like the language a poet would draw upon in creating images while poetry was created from within the beauty of the building.
Perhaps the link is a little tenuous but fun to think about all the same.
So who are these four poets admiring the new Jeffrey Smart building on Hindley Street?
From the right; Alison Flett, Louise Nicholas, Jennifer Liston and Sam Noonan's camera
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 921, Four Poets' 5s f/11 ISO320 15mm
Wednesday, July 9. 2014
The Colley Reserve Rotunda is a state heritage icon taking pride place of just off Colley Reserve in Glenelg but for all it's aesthetic appeal I've never seen it being used.
Back in my old stomping ground of the Barossa Valley there was a similar rotunda which was the home of the local town brass band. It was lived in, play in and entertained from .... regularly.
So now when ever I see a rotunda I can't help but wonder, where's the band?
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 920, Where's The Band' 1/30s f/16 ISO160 15mm
Tuesday, July 8. 2014
New buildings, strong angles, bold tones, regular patterns and just a hint of skyline.
The angles do it for me every time!
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 919, Angularity' 1/100s f/10 ISO640 200mm
Monday, July 7. 2014
I wonder who's in the corner the man thought. It's hard to look down and across when you live on the Flatland of a brick wall.
Still he was not going to let his 2 dimensional presence get in the way of curiosity.
With a little bit of effort and a little bit of imagination and a little bit of faith he concentrated on the unseen world around him.
Slowly, almost imperceptibly at first, like shadows they flittered in and out of his perception. Then to his astonishment he could see them, strange 3 dimensional other-worldly being looking back up at him.
For the man on the wall Flatland will never be the same again.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 918, Looking Down From Flatland' 1/30s f/16 ISO160 17mm
Sunday, July 6. 2014
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Walk up close to any building, right up to the wall if possible and then look up.
The unfolding vertical landscape made horizontal in you mind will almost always surprise you! It does for me every time.
Its a perspective so alien to our brains as we go about even our taller cities that it seems like a new dimension altogether.
Stand there a moment, imagine you are lying on flat on your belly, really take in the scene until it feels normal.
Then try and walk away without falling over!
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 917, Is Vertical The New Horizontal' 1.6s f/16 ISO320 15mm
Saturday, July 5. 2014
I discovered this dude skulking in an impossible-to-get-to place just off Philip Street in the Adelaide CBD.
I'm not sure who the artist is so I am not sure who to give credit to for this odd stylized figure looking back over his shoulder keeping a watchful eye out just in case he is seen.
The location too is just as intriguing tucked away not just in a back alley but on a high wall with rooftop access only.
Now all he needs to do is look up!
I'm sure I have seen this artist's work before so I'm on the lookout now. All hints appreciated.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 916, The Dude' 1/100s f/4 ISO160 200mm
As far as architecture goes, straight line geometry seems to come and go with the fashion.
For me though a new building of replicating geometry will always draw my eye and my attention.
The zig zag concrete ribs on the new University of South Austraila's, 'Jeffrey Smart' building reminded me of the zig zig tracks on a printed circuit board.
How fitting a reminder of my early studies at this very same institution well before it earned the status of 'University'.
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 915, Zig Zag' 1/50s f/10 ISO640 123mm
Thursday, July 3. 2014
There was something irresistibly irreverent about this plastic mug in a second-hand market and that way Matt Lucas is suggesting I keep it all on the quiet.
Of all the images I've created .... this is one of them!
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 914, Little Britain' 1/4000s f/2.8 ISO100 200mm
Wednesday, July 2. 2014
It can't be coincidence that more often than not, when I go to explore a great piece of street art I've just discovered I often find Fred Rock's familiar style and the Toy Solders Crew medallion!!
This stunning wall just off Hindley Street is bold, colourful and my favourite theme, nautical.
I wonder if anyone has curated a photographic collection of Federico 'Rock' Roldan's street art? If not I volunteer!
Photo: Robert Rath, 'Day 913, Fred Rock Rocks' 1/13s f/11 ISO640 25mm
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