Χωρίς εξηγήσεις.
[Οκ, αν θέλετε εξηγήσεις ελπίζω να ξέρετε αγγλικά. Λέει ο ίδιος στον Guardian:
This image was taken when I was on tour in Chicago in 2008 and suffering from my usual crippling insomnia. Sitting at the window of the hotel at 4am, staring out at the city, I was filled with a strange sense of comfort. The scene was like a perfect tableau from the science-fiction movies I used to watch in the 70s. Its composition is incredibly simple: you can see about 50 miles to the horizon, and on every last inch of land, bright lights illuminate desolate streets.
Anthropologically, it poses the question: why, as a species, are we compelled to build in right angles? If you walk through a forest, everything is twisting and turning, so it seems odd that the human contribution to the natural order has been the right angle.
I only took one photograph, which is asinine, seeing as there's no reason not to take lots of images with a digital camera. But I still shoot like someone who develops their own film. I got into photography when I was 10 and it used to take me ages to figure out what I wanted to shoot, since each image represented such an investment, both in terms of material costs and the amount of time it would take to process.]
*Δείτε επίσης, στη μεγάλη οθόνη της ΠΙΝΑΚΟΘΗΚΗΣ τις εικόνες που βράβευσε το National Geographic για το 2011:
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