35mm black-and-white film photograph of the "Mountain" at the Fort Worth Water Gardens, and the people around it, incidentally arranged in an irregular pentagon shape for the camera. The concrete Mountain is composed of a series of discrete 'steps', all tall & shallow, with a height of ~18 inches (46 cm). These 'steps' wrap all the way around the brutalist structure to form a kind of polygonal contour map if viewed from above. Balanced irregularity in the contours works to evoke a mountain as in nature, with its peaks and ridges. The two walls facing the camera meet in the center at a concave angleβthe left wall featuring some sloping variations while the right wall remains uniform. The wall is twelve consecutive 'steps' at its highest before it levels off, though a recessed 'summit' can be seen over the center.
In the midground center stands a couple, presumably checking a picture on their phone. Further back, a family takes a photo up against the left wall, two young children sitting on the third 'step' on either side of the older members. Above them are four girls climbing up a gradual ridge near the 'summit', one moving to help another get up a difficult ledge. On the other side, four boys awkwardly scale straight up the steep right wall. Just outside the frame is a small sign that prohibits climbing.
own work
πΈ the garden mountain.
i was initially disappointed that people were in the frame, but i think the composition is a lot more dynamic because of them, leading your eyes around.
#35mm π Ilford HP5+ #bw, π· Pentax LX
#blackandwhite #photography #photo #filmphotography #believeinfilm #architecture #art