Europe

Water Watching in Barcelona

Enjoying the show

 

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

 


Image

Being raised on a pedestal

Italian Street


Image

Amsterdam in the Winter Time


Image

Ice skating in front of the clock tower

Amsterdam Canal Skating


My voyage to Italy

You may have noticed that my daily posting has slackened off considerably of late, but this has not been the result of laziness on my part (well not completely), but rather because I’ve been off enjoying celebrating my 28th birthday in the lovely city of Rome.

Rome is a beautiful city with so much to see and do that even with a whole week to explore its environs, there’s still a hell of a lot that I missed out on.  Whatever I did have the opportunity to visit though, I’ve dutifully tried to photograph, and I hope that you’ll enjoy this little taste of my photographic record of my voyage to Rome.

The juxtaposition of ancient Roman ruins alongside the elaborate architecture and artworks of the Renaissance is a continuous feast for the eyes, whilst the opportunity to indulge myself in my first experiences of authentic Italian food was a delight for my belly (as was evident by its increased rotundity upon my return).

All the photographs that you see are available to buy in my store, which can be visited by clicking here, or on any of the photos.

Thanks for stopping by,

Feargal


The Swiss Guard

The Swiss Guard


In the arms of an angel in Prague

Czech Statue


A varied selection of statues found throughout my travels in Europe

Here’s a little selection of shots that I’ve gathered over the years on my travels throughout Europe. I enjoy shooting statues like they were live people and framing them accordingly, because it seems to breathe life into these static objects.

I think photography is often the most satisfying way of looking at statues, because photos reduce everybody to static statues frozen at the point that the camera’s shutter was released. And as a result of the stasis enshrined in the photographic process, pictures of these lifeless sculptures can sometimes appear just as alive any person photographed.

Let me know if you can recognise any of these, as I can hardly remember where I took them myself!


Overworked

Dummy sitting in window


Prague’s Golden Lights Falling onto the River Vltava

Prague City at Night


Money


Some Eindhoven Street Art


The end of the cygnets in Bruges


Fireman Fountain


Under the Blossoms in Bruges

 


Horses’ heads in Bruges


The Grand Palace, Brussels


Climbing a brick wall


Pond life in Bruges


People Watching in Girona


Vacant Berlin Bench


Prague Street Canteen


Dali

Here’s a shot of one of the wonderful Dali sculptures that I came across in Barcelona, and that seem to be dotted throughout Spain at large. I’m often struck when travelling by how incomparably more interesting European public art is compared to the predictable statues of politicians and exiled writers that we Irish seem to enjoy erecting so very much.

And since I’m thinking about Dali today, I thought that I’d share one of my favourite photos ever. This is Dali’s “atomicus”. This amazing shot apparently took 28 attempts to get right, and as a result probably isn’t also going to be a cat lover’s favourite photograph. However, one can’t help but admire the bravado of Dali and the ingenuity of the photographer Philippe Halsman in nailing such a busy shot with so many elements to get just right.

The real magic of this shot for me is that it is a record of a specific moment in time back in 1948, in which 3 cats and a bucket of water were flying through the air, whilst Salvador Dali was jumping and his assistant held up a chair at the edge of the frame. This photo therefore has value as a document of a moment in time. This makes it an indexical photo that refers to a specific historical event. In modern times it’s hard to imagine anybody taking the time to create and execute such a shot instead of just designing it on a computer screen through Photoshop.

Photoshop creates iconic images that can represent a cat flying through the air, but because these images are created on a computer screen and are only a representation of an image that occurred in an artist’s mind rather than a record of an actual event in time, these are not photographs, but pieces of digital art.

So please do enjoy one of the greatest photographs ever created and ask yourself if such a photo was created in post production on an image processing programme could it ever possibly have the same impact?


Statuesque