Single Point Perspective - An Homage to Stanley 'Fantastic' Kubrick - PHOTOGRAPHY
One Point / Single Point Perspective
When all lines converge to a single point I feel like I am in a Stanley Kubrick film. Whether it's 2001 A Space Odyssey, The Shining, A Clockwork Orange or Full Metal Jacket there's something mathematically and visually quite potent, as all lines converging to a single point on the horizon. It induces a kind of tunnel vision. Once you start noticing them, it's hard not to appreciate their singular point of focus and so when I see one, I generally have to stop and take it home.
A Matter of Inches
For a true single point perspective to work in a photograph or a zooming movie shot, you sometimes have to move literally a few inches in one direction so that you are in the exact middle. It's not always possible to get exactly in the middle of the shot due to objects in the way. Other times, the true nature of the single point is not quite lined up as the horizon lines may curve away slightly.
Art Class
If you were to draw a single point view, you would imagine an arbitrary point on the horizon in the Z axis and you would draw all lines pointing towards it. When you added horizontal or X axis points, you would now start to describe a mathematically and visually realistic scene. In an ordinary view there are often have multiple points like the shot of Geno's Cheese Steak on the Corner in Downtown Philadelphia below. If you were drawing this, you would have two imaginary points on the horizon. All your lines in the Z axis would either point to one or the other depending on the position of the object. Try it for yourself with a piece of paper.
Tunnel Vision
Because we live in busy (often urban) spaces we don't encounter single point perspectives as often as we might and for this reason they hold a special fascination. Hotel & Hospital corridors, country roads, block in New York all have them. Here is a small selection from my collection and at the bottom a twin point perspective for comparison and I a great bonus, youtube compilation of Stanley Fantastic Kubrick's use of SPP / OPP
- Kentish Town West Overground station from the Platform Bridge
- Raised walkway above the reeds at Woodberry Downs Nature Reserve & Reservoir
- This Green Path at Lea Valley Park Reserve actually leads to a dead end
- A not quite SPP from Hackney Central Overground Station Bridge
- The wide long sandy Beach at low tide - Costa Calma, Fuerteventura
- Fulton Brooklyn, New York's Grid pattern design and long avenues give ample scope for SPP's
- Another seemingly infinite SPP in New York - Manhattan block crossing
- The London Underground has many long tunnels which induce a kind of rollercoaster effect
- This view of Geno's on the corner in Philly has two points of perspective which lie outside the shot on the left and the right.
CLICK DANNY TO PLAY THE MOVIE
I dedicate this pot in honour of the Late Great and Fantastic Stanley Kubrick who has taught me more about visual storytelling than perhaps anyone else, just by studying his excellent body of work.
@outerground you did a great job with the pictures, thanks for sharing
Beautiful pictures , makes me feel like I'm on the journey as well ! @outerground
thanks @dihoa, we're all on the same journey.. I'm just one of the unofficial documenters
Ok, this post worth at least 100 steem dollars. Maybe I'm not very objective because I love Kubrick (literally adored the video in the end), I love lines, I didn't know -that in detail- about the one/single point perspective even though I'm a photographer (shame on me!) It is interesting, your pictures are spectacular (and I love them besides the fact that I'm not a crazy fan of bw), you know what to say, when to say it and how to say it! We need more of posts like this so thank you! Unfortunately I don't have enough money to randowhale it now, but I will probably tomorrow! :D
That's possibly the best comment I've ever received from anyone on steemit. Thank you @meanmommy. I'm actually quite touched by your kind words :) and coming from a fellow photographer, a professional one at that, it means more.
I am left handed so there's something about black and white which for me, allows us to process a gestalt (whole image) and not be sidetracked by the relative emotions of colour. Black and white has a purity for me and although I love colour and I really do love colour, I feel I can control the message with BW for a certain type of image which is often all about form, shape and line.
& of course you are right, S'Kubrick was an absolute Master and although he didn't make enough films for us, they were all a lesson, each in their own right.
here's a shocking gif I made from the storm the other night as a GIFt for your comment
Well, I think that's indeed the best comment I've ever given since I joined Steemit more than 2 months ago so the appreciation is mutual :D
I always take the time to write proper comments and upvote (when my voting power allows it!!), especially to people I follow - I mean I chose them to see their posts so I must like them right? But this one, was one of the few if not the only one that well put and structured that I couldn't keep it to myself!
And HEY!!! I'm a lefty too !!!! :D :D :D I totally get the 'purity' of black and white. My Dad was a bw lover (also a photographer, http://dinosdiamantopoulos.com/ ) and I do like it too in certain occasions. Sometimes though I get the feeling that it somehow 'steals' something from the truth when there are no colors... Other than that though, I loved printing bw in the dark room - it was my favorite routine, once upon a time...
Haha thank you for your GIFt !!! LOVE IT :D
Thanks again.. I think taking the time to actually write a meaningful comment shows true grit and determination to be a useful piece of consciousness. A valuable asset in these time of fluff and powder. left hands unite! I love colour I really do. but when you take the colour away, what's really important is tone and for that reason BW does something extra for me.. and as ridiculous as it sounds, generally people perceive BW to be more serious because in the old days when colour film was new - (colour film was seen as gimmicky)
Your post is still 0,37 ... so because I'm not lying or over-promoting myself, because I got the half dollar I was missing, I'm randowhaling you right now - you should see it any moment now. I'm glad also @photo-trail saw what I saw clearly and you got upvote, resteem and DPS - I'll resteem too now that I think about it :D
About us lefties I was thinking of making a post, see how many we are in here haha!! We are the most creative ones, you know that right? (I don't wanna sound arrogant and say the most intelligent ones too :P :P )
That's what my Dad used to say about the color...that without you're left with what's important, the shape and the lines... ;)
Ahhhh..... I miss the smell of chemicals...How sad that the new generation of photographers will never be in a dark room :/
So I resteemed and I'll try randowhaling again tomorrow that I'll get some money :(
ah, this is the comment I randowhaled by mistake!!! At least you got the money, yay!!! :D
Amazing photos @outerground ^ ^
I love that GIF ! Thanks @yusayamon
Marvelous job with photos @outerground, it's just… Stanley Kubrick was limited with the horizontal movie format and had to make perspective thinking “horizontally”, while your photos are majority vertical 😊 Upvoted, resteemed & DPS.
Thanks @photo-trail Stan was a true genius and he seemed to be able to achieve what others wouldn't even dare to dream ! It's really interesting that he had to make the horizontal work
Brilliant picture and yes a very effecting technique. Kubrick was a genius many of his film would be in my top ten, obviously that doesn’t work mathematically but you know what I mean. Nice post thanks :)
Thanks @vibeof100monkeys I know what you mean.. all his films would fit in the top 20 ! I just got a DVD copy of Barry Lyndon which I don't think I've ever seen.. exciting, he had a lot of tricks up his very capacious sleeves