Showing posts with label Mozambique. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mozambique. Show all posts

Monday, June 08, 2009

Technicolor tropic.

Maputo, the capital city of Mozambique, is positioned on the Southern curve of Africa, where it feels astoundingly out of place. If you are driving toward it from South Africa, you will likely first pass through Neilspruit, a town notable primarily for its mediocrity. It is an unremarkable city of lifeless brick apartment buildings, Hungry Lion takeaways, and Caterpillar sales-yards. Its wide streets are open to the sky, feeling a bit like a long yawn triggered by the lazy warmth of the afternoon sun. All the more surprising then, when one departs this sleepy city, crosses the border, travels several hours through dry scrub and bush, and appears suddenly in a town that seems to have been lifted out of the Technicolor tropics, transported from a Caribbean musical, and left on Africa’s shore.

The air in Maputo is sticky with a tropical torpor, which its energetic Modernist buildings seem to rebel against, vibrating in angular forms and ice cream hues of rose, lime and buttercream. Flames of bougainvillea lick against the balconies of decrepit villas, and flamboyants litter the uneven pavement with their fiery petals. Not to be outdone by their spectacular surrounds, Maputo’s citizens dress with an equal measure of finesse. Men stroll in sleeveless shirts and calf-length shorts to catch the sun; women wear bright hues, in spaghetti straps and slip-on-shoes if young, in wrap skirts and headscarves if old.

As a city, Maputo has more of a sense of history and architecture than anywhere else in Southern Africa. This grandiose vaulted market was built by someone; that art deco movie theatre was built by someone else. Perhaps most impressive is the city’s train station, a pistachio coloured confection that, depending on who you ask, was designed by Eiffel himself, or, more likely, a student of his. A heavyset tower marks the entrance, its iron dome shielding a baroquely ornate clock. Inside, travellers stroll through arched colonnades en route to catch their trains.

In mid-day, the sun can be brutal, so it’s the best time to slip under the awning of a sidewalk café. Face to the street for people watching, and spend a leisurely afternoon sipping strong coffee, sweetened with bites of a sugary pastry. The darkened interior of one such corner spot was decorated with a sprawling world map, browning now from age, that hints to an era when the city was still known as Lorenco Marques, and still a destination for the adventurous jet set.

Nearing sunset, ones attention is drawn to an old carnival ground near the waterfront. In the sunlight, it had seemed deserted; Ferris wheel caught midair, cars hanging as if stopped mid-sentence. But at night, there is no trace of abandon. Electricity switched on, the amusements are now studded with the pinpricks of light from hundred of glowing light bulbs. But most of the visitors have not come to wait in line at the carousel. Instead, they’ve come for the nightlife: the village of bars and restaurants that roll up their shutters after sunset. After a meal of flame-grilled chicken, they move to the low-key bar next door, to savour a beer in the seaside cool of a Maputo evening.

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Billboard photography.

I've always struggled at photographing cities. In part, I had been trained that I should crop out all 'unsightly' elements when planning a photographic composition. I took this somewhat severely, and would attempt to photograph streets and buildings so that they did not contain crowds of distracting people, signs of traffic, telephone poles and their mess of wires, and advertising billboards- the elements of a city that make it a city, basically.

This generally created very dull photos. More recently, I've been trying to strategically include those elements in my photographs. I think working billboards into the compositions has been most challenging. I've tried a few methods, like using the structures of billboards for visual or thematic contrast with the scene, or to give a sense of time and place to the photograph.

Halab, Syria

Hollywood, CA

Beirut, Lebanon
West Hollywood, CA

Maputo, Mozambique

Downtown Los Angeles, CA

Bulawayo, Zimbabwe

I'm attempting to included billboards in my photographs for a few reasons. In part, I'm interested in the way that art and graphics interact with our lives, and the way that advertising creates a visual intrusion into the landscape of the city. I'm also interested in the flat, graphic nature of photographs- I try to emphasize this by including flat elements in the photograph against a shallow background, like the Air Zimbabwe billboard, which merges with the building below it against the backdrop of the sky.