SANTEE, CA — Patch reader Jason McAllister captured this photo of a butterfly, an orange giant sulphur, in “Conejo Gardens,” his backyard in Santee.
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SmallRig has unveiled an impressive lineup of USB-C Rechargeable Camera Batteries designed so that you can charge them with a single USB Type-C cable without the need for a charger. This means that there’s no longer a need to pack additional chargers, instead, you can simply plug your depleted battery into any USB Type-C port and the battery will start to charge. Not only is this way of charging for a standard camera battery a revelation, but they’re also extremely cost-effective. SmallRig has just announced the following five battery solutions.
NP-F970: Compatible with multiple camera and video devices, including ATOMOS Ninja V (Only $79.99)
SmallRig’s NP-F970 USB-C Rechargeable Camera Battery is a compact powerhouse. With a massive 10,500mAh nominal capacity, it’s built to last through extended shoots. The standout feature is the inclusion of a USB-C input/output port and a USB-A output port, essentially turning it into a portable power bank for your other devices. Charging is easy with 20W USB Power Delivery (PD), ensuring a full charge in just 6 hours. The LED battery indicators keep you informed about the battery’s status. This battery is visually distinctive and comes with quality battery cells, guaranteeing stable voltage and current output.
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NP-FW50: Sony Cameras (Only $39.99)
SmallRig’s NP-FW50 USB-C Rechargeable Camera Battery is designed for those on the move. With a 1030mAh nominal capacity, it may be small in size, but it delivers big when it comes to convenience. The USB-C charging port supports a variety of charging sources, including power banks, power strips, car chargers, and dedicated chargers. At 5V/1A, it charges rapidly, reaching full capacity in just 2.25 hours. This battery boasts a visually distinctive design, is fully decoded to avoid any pop-up warnings, and, like all SmallRig batteries, features a safe and reliable circuit for stable voltage and current output.
NP-F550: Compatible with multiple camera and video devices, including ATOMOS Ninja V (Only $44.99)
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EN-EL15c: Nikon (Only $44.99)
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SmallRig’s EN-EL25 USB-C Rechargeable Camera Battery is ideal for Nikon Z series users. Despite its compact size, it boasts a 1250mAh nominal capacity. The USB-C charging port ensures efficient charging at 5V/1.6A, allowing it to reach full capacity in just 1.75 hours. As with all SmallRig batteries, it’s visually distinctive, fully decoded, and designed with a dependable circuit for steady voltage and current output.
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SmallRig: Leading the Charge in Camera Accessories
SmallRig’s commitment to providing photographers and videographers continues with these innovative USB-C Rechargeable Camera Batteries. These batteries offer not only an economical alternative to manufacturer-specific batteries but also convenience, reliability, and promise performance, we’re running tests on these batteries at present and will have the full review on them soon.
Availability
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National Geographic Explorer Anand Varma points to something resembling a fish tank skeleton in a corner room of the lab. His office–or what would have been his office if he hadn’t considered using it as an aquarium–is coated floor to wall in ship deck paint. It needs to be water resistant.
“That’s mainly to house our marine species and aquatic animals. Although, we’re building some photography infrastructure into that.” He says it nonchalantly. He’s created an aquarium with far less before. His photography studio, which would also house various animal subjects from time to time, used to be his garage. Acquisition of this new space, a retired 1927 ketchup factory room he’s engineered into the WonderLab, means having a designated center to experiment with innovative ways of documenting wonders of the natural world often invisible to the naked eye, and helping shepherd others do the same.
Varma’s curiosity, experimentation, and passion are endless. Identifying professionally as a science photographer is “ambiguous enough,” he says, since he’s a biologist by education whose passion for photography has led him to a career of documenting the natural world. But through years of photographing a growing list of species–from hummingbirds to parasites–and their biological processes, he’s arrived at as many discoveries as he has questions.
Varma has always wondered how natural processes take place. What does it look like when a chicken is being formed in the egg? How does a hummingbird tongue work? The relentless pursuit of his curiosity has funneled into a life of creatively solving problems. If the technology that could answer these questions existed, he wouldn’t have to create it himself.
“I’m a supremely unqualified engineer,” he says with palpable humility. But around the WonderLab, which at the time of this interview houses around 40 tanks, 16 incubators, countless engineering tools, and bakery carts full of inventions, there’s evidence of his mind at work in every corner. To achieve this caliber of detail, everything must be specialized.
Synergy of science and photography
The WonderLab’s windows open toward San Pablo Avenue in Berkeley, California, in one of the city’s more beautiful industrial buildings. Varma envisions the space as a place to train a new generation of practitioners who can design their own techniques for cultivating curiosity and wonder. At this time, before officially opening its doors to students in the fall, the space is a work in progress. There’s a kink to workout with the window shades, which will hopefully be resolved shortly. There are also some LED lights coming in, that will dim things down to about point three percent around the lab when he needs. It’s all part of laying the groundwork, and this kind of time investment has yielded results for Varma.
“This is a system I built for jellyfish.” Varma stands in front of an enormous steel table he sourced from an optics lab that specializes in laser research. The slab appears to float in midair which helps isolate outside movement. “It means we can set up cameras to film really tiny things without any vibrations.” Old microscopes he found on eBay hook up to cables that, with some engineering, allow him to adjust motors and lights via remote control. “We can connect it to software that allows us to program movements and scene changes.”
To an onlooker, the desk-sized film studio looks like a Frankenstein robot, but he’s essentially duplicated a Hollywood stop motion film rig. It’s the same sort of technology used in Wallace and Gromit.
Varma reveals he grew up making clay stop motion films with his brother. He realized early on in his life that this type of animation could be applied to nature’s unseen world. He also remembers his fixation with the diagram of the lifecycle of a jellyfish in one of his biology textbooks. His thoughts went something like, “It does not make any sense how they transform across their lives. They go from stuck to the ground to floating in the ocean and have this weird in-between phase.” The fusion of his interests in visual media and science was beginning to crystallize.
Later, fellow Explorer David Gruber invited him to collaborate on his work with sharks, jellies, and turtles after seeing Varma’s talk at National Geographic’s Explorer’s Festival in 2017. By this point, Varma was already sharing with the world about how he zoomed in on bees and parasites to reveal worlds and behavior never seen before by humans.
“He [Gruber] was like ‘are you interested in any of this?’ I grew up wanting to be a marine biologist, so I wanted to do all the things.” But jellies were the low hanging fruit. They could be bred in a basement, they could be FedExed, and that is exactly what Varma did.
It took four years to get the shot. He thought he figured it out, then was met with challenges and went back to the drawing board. He was unknowingly making discoveries about their anatomy and processes for survival along the way–like the fact that they regenerate, which Varma witnessed by accident after several were injured in a plumbing mishap.
“You stumble upon some weird feature or behavior, and you go back to the scientists and they’re like, ‘No, we don’t know what that is. Actually, can you send us more of that video? Because we’ve never seen that before.’”
Something similar happened with the honeybees in 2015, when he unveiled his 21-day life cycle of bees project. After six months of dozens of attempts, and Varma engineering his own incubator and perfecting the conditions for bees in each stage, from larva, to pupa, to honeybee, he captured the development process and unique behavior scientists had not yet seen. “That was the first time I started to see photography and science not as these mutually exclusive things, but as synergistic efforts.”
Challenging assumptions
Though magazine editors advised he shouldn’t worry about the science as a photographer, it was impossible to document biology without understanding it. The photo of a parasite wiggling out of a cricket’s belly, he reminds, is a biological phenomenon immortalized. The conditions had to be duplicated, and therefore, understood. “It can’t just be where you put the light or when you hit the shutter. It has to be that in combination with an understanding, discovery, or an exploration.”
In many ways, Varma feels a sense of duty to help people challenge their assumptions of the natural world. His most gratifying audience to serve are students, because in his words, their minds are still “squishy.”
“The higher challenge is getting someone who is entrenched in their assumptions about the world. How do I resquishify?” He’s as relentless in his pursuit of creating images stunning enough that people will reconsider their opinions about parasites, as he is in documenting hummingbirds, apart from their cuteness, as incredibly complex.
Varma’s work makes the case for how a compelling image can change minds and make room for new ideas. Even the WonderLab is a challenge to traditional thinking.
“When I go to a science lab, to me, it is not a place that inspires curiosity. It’s one step up from an office building.” The WonderLab is an emporium of materials for life-sustaining invention and storytelling, and beyond its functional purpose, a minimalist beauty.
His workshop is stacked top to bottom with hardware and tools. Inventions are sorted by project in blue bins, stacked floor to ceiling on stationary shelves. It’s probably the most industrial-looking part of the lab, and it’s tidily tucked away behind double doors. The process of inventing and engineering, like nature in creation, can be isolating, chaotic, and at times brutal, but necessary before reaching completion.
A few giant, jellyfish-shaped light fixtures hang from the ceiling. Rows of rolling desks are uniformly scattered on the naturally-lit wooden floors, and some of Anand’s most proud work sprawls the walls as giant murals. With a button click the window shades come down and the lab goes dark. “We’ll be able to set up theater nights or movie mode,” he says. The space is designed to accommodate 32 students, and it’s hardly an ordinary classroom.
“For a while we had crabs, mussels, and an urchin in there. Students can make observations with the naked eye, then with the cameras.”
One thing about Varma, he does his research. His model comes from studying the book Slow Looking by Shari Tishman, who designed a framework for fostering curiosity and attention–exactly what Varma was after. “This is my life and my work, she just put a name to it and structure to it, and lessons for how to teach it. I thought, ‘oh this is exactly what I do. How do I pair it with the photography specific focus we have?’”
‘The craziness of science’
At this point, Varma and his two lab assistants, Mark Unger and Jacob Saffarian, receive a shipment. “It looks like a sarcophagus,” one of them comments. The wooden box does fit the bill of something housing remains, but inside is a sump tank–a crucial piece to complete the aquarium in progress. It will house cuttlefish and squid eggs that the team will welcome a few days from now. With guidance from the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Varma has learned how to engineer the conditions to keep marine creatures alive.
Varma is a fascinating hang. For someone who spends so much time entrenched in science, technology, and his own art, he’s incredibly good at explaining complex ideas in layman terms.
“The way to think about a jellyfish’s life is more like an apple tree. You have this tree that produces apples, the apples fall and get carried off, but the tree dies. In the case of the jellyfish, after it produces those jellies, it turns back into a polyp (a baby jelly). It’s not done producing. In one species, that polyp can clone itself seven different ways in at least one species.” He saw it first while documenting a jellyfish in his tank that was mowed down by another soft bodied marine animal, a nudibranch, and the jelly left behind a little copy of itself in an armored casing. Some jellies reorganize their bodies into polyps without ever really reproducing. “They call it the immortal jelly.”
“There is no known end of life to that polyp that can clone itself indefinitely.” Could he have documented the next breakthrough for human’s insatiable thirst for immortality? “It could be that it’s never going to work in humans. It could be that it does, who knows. That’s the craziness of science.”
It was always fish
From about eight years old, Varma was decided on becoming a biologist. He toyed with the idea of studying ichthyology, which would allow him to get a unique look at fish. Since the time a channel catfish stuck its nose out at him at the Atlanta farmer’s market when he was just a boy, it was fish that had his attention. “I was just tall enough to peep over the edge of the tank. One of the fish jumped out at me. I remember falling over backwards, stunned by this fish.” It was the beginning of an infatuation. Though, he also remembers asking his parents to hold off on cleaning or fileting a rainbow trout from his high chair, so that he might marvel at all its scales and colors. Every bit, he recalls, “was stimulating and surprising.”
At 14, he got an early work permit to take a job at the aquarium store. He needed to fund his hobby of keeping up fish tanks–seven of them in total–at home.
His senior year of high school he borrowed his father’s digital camera, taking it on trips with friends into the woods and coming back with experimental photos. Shortly after graduation, he took a summer job as a photo assistant to Explorer David Liittschwager on an assignment for National Geographic. His job was to rappel down caves in Sequoia National Park and help Liittschwager photograph species new to science.
Later, he worked on a project in Hawaii, where he collected baby flounder, shrimp, and crabs. It was his job to keep them happy while Liittschwager photographed them. By now, he had spent enough time around freelancers to know the life didn’t appeal to him; he spent years watching people decades into their careers sometimes scramble for work. He was dead set on getting a graduate degree after one last field adventure, but the opportunities kept coming.
“I’m not going to turn down an opportunity to go snorkeling in Tahiti or tree climbing in Costa Rica,” he remembers, laughing. Eventually, he began pursuing his own projects, which included early support from the Society through a Young Explorer Grant, funding his project documenting the wetlands of Patagonia. Fifteen years on, he’s continued carving his own path and welcoming the world into his mind.
Every bit takes time
A few feet from the aquarium room in the lab, a couple of chicken embryos are in development. The oldest one at the time of this visit is 14 days into its life in the egg. The future chicks’ participation in Varma’s latest work is the materialization of a childlike fervor he’s maintained since seeing chicken embryos at San Francisco’s Exploratorium. Now, equipped with the tool of his trade, he’s been documenting their life at its earliest stage, from a small clump of cells, to chicken embryo, to hatchling, by going inside the egg.
He calls his method of access “surprisingly simple,” holding up surgical scissors which he uses to cut a harmless window into the shell that allows humans to see life forming as never before. He adopted the method from the lab at the University of California, San Francisco.
The results speak for themselves, but Varma is still refining his system to avoid jagged edges, lopsided holes, and obstruction from intrusive shell dust. “We’re prototyping the way to do it with a dentist drill, essentially. A micro-motor that will allow us to grind a hole in the shell without puncturing the membrane.”
It was trial and error that brought Varma to success with the chicken embryo. The egg, he learned, needs to be rotated every so often–usually the job of the mother hen–to ensure the embryo doesn’t stick to the shell membrane. How do you rock the embryo and still photograph it? This time he outsourced an engineer to develop a system that would rock the egg in its chamber every five minutes, while a camera hanging above it snaps a photo at the precise moment.
Every bit takes time. His quickest turnaround from set up to getting the shot was when he photographed bats. “It was the second try. So it was two or three days. That’s the shortest of any picture I’ve ever taken.” The photo is appreciated in gigantic form in the lab, splashed across one of its main walls, facing a sister print of Varma’s hummingbird work, which he calls his most precious.
The hummingbird project is the culmination of ten years of work. Its video component reveals details about the tiny bird’s biology, only detectable at some 2,000 frames per second in 4k resolution—slow and clear motion. The picture is stunning, and educational. After spending more than eight years working with scientists on how to handle and train hummingbirds, he documented how these creatures deal with rain, dry themselves, and use their forked tongue to feed. It takes a viewer beyond “their colorful cuteness” to reveal a tough flier with impressive biomechanics.
With jellyfish he was starting fresh. He had to spin their housing conditions and photography set from scratch, which took three years of testing aquariums, experimenting with water flow, lighting, and learning how to manage their biology.
There are three streams that need to converge to get the shot: the biology, the engineering and the photography. By his estimation, Varma’s work is 65 percent engineering, 30 percent biology and five percent photography.
“What’s the actual amount of time that the camera is on and recording? That’s probably like point one percent,” he reveals. The most important thing is perfecting the conditions to keep these animals alive, then, determining what phenomenon he aims to capture and what kind of engineering is needed to make that possible. “Then you can start to make aesthetic decisions about how to get the image,” he concludes. But as nature has it, the process can be messy, nonlinear, and even look regressive.
“It never happens in just those three steps. You take the picture and it doesn’t look good. You have to go back to engineering to get the lighting or angles right, or you don’t even see the phenomenon you’re trying to and you go back to the biology. Sometimes you go back to square one.”
Resetting wonder
With the cephalopods on their way to the lab, Anand is very much in the biology phase of his latest lifecycle visualization project, Metamorphosis. He’s not sweating any deadline in particular, he doesn’t know how long it’ll take to get the shot, but Varma is equipped with the experience to know he’ll have to tool and retool again.
To Varma, photography “is just a vehicle for creating a sense of wonder.” His work is proof of a deep understanding of the subject; to have become intimate enough with nature to know how to keep it alive, to be familiar with its quirks, and to show off its most flattering angles.
The squid and octopus eggs are a new photographic, biological, and engineering experiment. How do you keep them clean, aerated, and keep the view clear enough to observe how it’s growing? Does this future squid need to be rotated in its encasing while developing? Maybe there’s something cool to see when it hatches but not while it’s growing–he doesn’t know yet. The childlike fervor Varma still retains for the natural world makes it worth all the work. Certainly, he’ll learn something.
His work is a front row ticket to life up close, and yet, nature still holds secrets, and they can sometimes seem drenched in paradox, Varma says. For example, how a tiny embryo is robust enough to withstand being jostled around, but has an equally delicate alchemy. “All of a sudden at the very end [of development] because at step two of 483 was slightly off, that process gets stopped,” he explains, amazed and puzzled.
“I feel like I’m too early in the process to have any deep insights about the world, but it feels ripe for understanding. I know enough to know this is not going to all fit in a neat box at the end. I have more questions than when I started.”
Growing into his own career identity, at the cornerstone of disciplines, means getting comfortable with not fitting into a single mold. One of the payoffs, though, is that Varma’s dedication to the nature he photographs, on top of an innovative approach to his craft has earned him street cred with scientists, photographers, and engineers alike. “You don’t have to accept what the dictionary definition of a scientist or a photographer is, because there’s magic at the intersection,” he encourages.
He hopes to impart this open-minded approach to career development on the new generation through his mentorship, particularly in the sciences and photography.
“Images serve a higher purpose that I’m still trying to define concisely.” Varma says. “The goal is to create a connection between people and science, and redefine how people relate to nature. I think that’s most powerfully achieved through creating a sense of wonder.” And though humans grow into adults and the threshold for what produces wonder “seems to go up,” he’s compelled to showcase the natural world as new, time and time again. His wheels are turning now.
“What is it going to take to reset that sense of wonder? That feels like what my task is.”
Anand Varma has curated a new book titled Invisible Wonders: Photographs of the Hidden World, featuring work by other National Geographic Explorers, scientists and photographers. The pages guide readers through the eye-popping world of photographic wonders: fascinating images that reveal colors, shapes, and configurations, micro and macro, that cannot be seen with the naked eye. Available Sep 26, 2023.
ABOUT THE WRITER For the National Geographic Society: Natalie Hutchison is a Digital Content Producer for the Society. She believes authentic storytelling wields power to connect people over the shared human experience. In her free time she turns to her paintbrush to create visual snapshots she hopes will inspire hope and empathy.
The subject of this month’s Estes Valley Astronomical Society (EVAS) meeting will be “exploring the universe through astrophotography,” with Dr. RDee Sherrill. EVAS, in conjunction with The Estes Park Memorial Observatory is offering a free public open house and lecture on Saturday Sept. 30, 2023. The goal of EVAS is to promote amateur astronomy and education in the Estes valley.
Astrophotography provides us with insights into the mysteries of the universe not visible with the naked eye. Whether we enjoy the technical or physical side of this hobby, the pictures we produce are special, they are personal, the result of many hours perseverance, they help give meaning to the beauty and awe of the universe.
The Messier 101(M101) face-on spiral galaxy.(Estes Park Memorial Observatory/Courtesy Photo)
The Messier 51(M51) Whirlpool Galaxy.(Estes Park Memorial Observatory/Courtesy Photo)
Dr. Sherrill has experience in equipment, techniques and processes to make this presentation interesting to beginners through experienced photographers. He will share his knowledge of several niches of astronomy imaging, especially deep sky objects includeing nebulae, star clusters, galaxies and more.
After receiving his PhD degree in nuclear chemistry, Dr. Sherrill worked at the DOE Rocky Flats Plant, the NASA Johnson Space Center, the DOE Brookhaven National Laboratory and several private companies. RDee and his wife Beth moved full time to Estes Park in 2011 and he retired in 2013. Upon retirement RDee decided to further pursue his lifelong interest in astronomy by building an observatory and delving into the Astro Photography of deep space objects. RDee is now a full-fledged, self-taught Astro photographer who can rival most professionals in the field.
The observatory is just north of the high school at 1600 Manford Avenue. Please park in the teacher’s parking lot adjacent to the observatory. The doors will open at 7 p.m. and the meeting will start at 7:30 p.m. The presentation, including a question-and-answer period, lasts about an hour. After the presentation, weather permitting, we will look through the telescope at various celestial objects. Information about the meeting can be found on the observatory website at: www.AngelsAbove.Org.
Here are the stunning winning photos of the Monovisions Black & White Photography Awards 2023. Monovisions is dedicated to uncovering the world’s finest monochrome photographers and providing them with the recognition and rewards they deserve.
The competition features two distinct categories: “Black and White Photo of the Year and Black and White Series of the Year.” The total cash prize is totaling $5,000. The series winner for 2023 is Alexandra Black for her photo “Datura’s Secrets” and the singles winner is Michael Dorohovich for his photo “Tetyana Litus – is a Potter, Ceramist “.
The Monovisions Awards for 2024 is now open for photographers. You can check their website for more information.
You can find more info Monovisions Awards:
#1 Photo Of The Year 2023 Award: Tetyana Litus – is a Potter, Ceramist By Michael Dorohovich
TETYANA LITUS – is a potter, ceramist, blogs on social networks about the specifics of work, life on a prosthesis. The girl who overcame oncology lost her leg, but did not lose herself. Specially does not hide the absence of a limb and a prosthesis, believing that people in our society should treat people with disabilities tolerantly, not considering them deprived. He leads an active lifestyle, rides a bicycle, swims. And has a motto for life: Nothing is impossible.
#2 Abstract Photo Of The Year: Drift By Krzysztof Papuga
#3 Architectural Photo Of The Year: Inspiration – Focus – Interpretation By Beat Gauderon
#4 Conceptual Photo Of The Year: Serenity By Seth Mayer
#5 Fine Art Photo Of The Year: Homage to Brancusi By Felicia Simion
#6 Landscape Photo Of The Year: Separation By Mark Pelder
#7 Nature & Wildlife Photo Of The Year: The Circle of Life By Rahul Sachdev
#8 Photojournalism Photo Of The Year: The right to know By Roberta Vagliani
#9 Portrait Photo Of The Year: Genclik By Ozgur Secmen
#10 Street Photo Of The Year: Amazed By Cenk Bayirli
#11 Travel Photo Of The Year: A usual day in Zanzibar By Yanitsa Genova
As Roland Barthes says, photography kills time. Exactly these moments of preserving the image, a cross-section of what is happening in everyday life, I tried to convey in my photographs. To freeze that feeling of constantly flowing happiness and carefreeness. Black and white remain the purest possible way to influence, to find the absence in the presence. The black and white vision helps the selection of the photos not to be in dissonance with the general visual and semantic logic.
#12 Series Of The year 2023 Award: Datura’s Secrets By Alexandra Black
#13 Abstract Series Of The Year: Paths of Enlightenment By Yaser Sulaiman
#14 Landscape Series Of The Year: Cypress Swamps By Jim Guerard
#15 Nature And Wildlife Series Of The Year: Under the Great African Sky By James Lewin
During July, we delved into the Design Process as our monthly topic. Inspired by practices that intersect various uncommon layers in their creations, we talked with architect Guto Requena. When designing, his studio experiments with different digital technologies through a sustainable lens and with a keen eye on social issues, aiming to deliver innovative and emotional experiences. Today, the architect boasts numerous national and international awards, including the ArchDaily Building of the Year and the UNESCO Prix Versailles.
In the interview, Requena shares his journey, highlighting the diversity of his team as a critical innovation point in his firm. He also addresses crucial questions about fostering innovation and creativity with new materials in architecture, among other topics.
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Victor Delaqua (ArchDaily): In architecture schools, we are taught to think about physical space, but in your projects, you mention the creation of a hybrid architecture in which concrete and the virtual world blend together. How does this fusion influence your design process?
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Get to know some of the projects by Estudio Guto Requena
Guto Requena: During college, great mentors taught me to view architecture from the perspective of form, function, flow, the relationship with the street, and aesthetics. However, no professor encouraged me to approach a fundamental question: does architecture have a role in fostering empathy and collectivity?
This question seems to gain more significance when considering that we are increasingly isolated. There’s a significant risk of technology isolating us, but humans are inherently social beings. So, how can we create spaces and experiences that invite people to look at each other and connect? Architecture also has this role, and it’s not reinventing the wheel, but the contemporary challenge lies in technology. Beyond concrete, brick, and metal, I can incorporate digital technologies to address this challenge – and there is a materiality and infrastructure for this hybrid and interactive architecture to happen: network cables, microcontrollers, LEDs, sensors, Arduino.
For me, the great fascination was discovering another dimension of experience arising from this hybrid architecture. I researched the topic in the Nomads group at USP for nine years with funding from FAPESP, delved deep into theory, created conceptual projects, and finally, after 15 years, collectively got our hands dirty and executed projects. Seeing architecture harness the power of people looking at each other, coming together, and getting to know each other through this analog and digital fusion is incredibly satisfying. It’s a moment of experimentation that goes beyond pure functionality. Of course, since it’s experimentation, there may be projects that aren’t as successful, but we are the first generation to do this and allow ourselves to investigate.
In the Brazilian context, this becomes a challenge-driven architecture. There are no large budgets, and we still don’t have a vast pool of computer scientists or programmers. In these circumstances, we tap into something unique in Brazilian creative thinking: turning the ordinary into the extraordinary. Sometimes, even with more limited resources, we achieve remarkable results. Something vibrant is emerging from this new Brazilian architecture – kinetic, with projections and sensors – and I believe the world will pay more attention to it. It encourages me to see that many students are increasingly interested in this field. There’s now a generation learning programming, and that’s the turning point: having architects who understand programming. That’s why I strongly advocate for teaching programming in architecture schools. Programming is a language; we must teach its basics to future professionals.
Beyond architecture, should programming be included in elementary education? As you mentioned, it’s a language. It does help to see the world from different perspectives…
Absolutely. There’s another crucial aspect to your comment, which is this another social inequality that’s emerging. Today, we see students in [Brazilian] private schools that include programming, robotics, and computing in their curricula. Unfortunately, in most [Brazilian] public schools, these opportunities are absent. This means there’s a modus operandi already ingrained in the education of privileged youth who enter architecture programs already familiar with these subjects. So, we run the significant risk of creating a digital divide that exacerbates social inequalities.
Regarding digital advancements, you incorporate various body and environment stimuli into the design process, along with automotive technologies. You bring together factors whose outcomes you may not necessarily control. How does this idea evolve?
A learning process in working with technology and algorithms involves thinking about architecture beyond the physical material. It’s about considering it from the perspective of experience and other sensory opportunities. For example, music and audio can make our brains think about spaces, recall places, and connect the body with the environment.
During my master’s studies, I became somewhat disillusioned with architecture because I couldn’t find examples and answers to these aspirations of understanding that the human body is undergoing a profound transformation. Sensory perception and cognition are undergoing significant shifts due to new digital technologies. So, I stepped away from architecture and began studying philosophy, arts, and places where I found answers. I encountered the theory of the cyborg body, understanding that we are the first generation with organic bodies increasingly intertwined with machinery. Therefore, we have different sensory perceptions and cognition. This gave me a reason to return to architecture and complete my master’s. Before delving into architecture, we need to zoom in on the fundamental pixel, which is the human; understanding this transformation and these new behaviors is crucial before zooming out to think about architecture and cities.
When we work with sensors, we must program them to create kinetic architecture. This requires a transdisciplinary perspective, a programming perspective. Something unprecedented and incredibly enriching in terms of the design process is multidisciplinary teams composed of computer scientists, hardware and software engineers, and programmers, all involved in the creative process. So, it’s not just the architect creating a beautiful concept and asking someone to execute it. In this process, the engineer is present at the creation table as we seek to understand other possibilities. This isn’t entirely new; architecture has always been a multidisciplinary field, but with digital technologies, I believe we’re reaching a rich connection point with other areas. When I assemble multidisciplinary teams to create projects, I’ve noticed that we achieve a much deeper conceptual depth.
A fundamental point when discussing the future of architecture and technology is the issue of race and diversity. Discussions of technology and architecture should no longer be divorced from the issue of race. I have learned, and still have much to learn, how much more exciting and profound my office has become as I’ve welcomed more Black architects, non-binary individuals, and transgender people into the team. It might sound cliché, but it’s a fact. Our projects have become more interesting when we move away from the creation solely by white individuals, a large portion of whom are privileged. Opening this up to the new generation has taken the office to unimaginable places. For me, innovation is increasingly coming not just from technology but from the power of this union of knowledge.
In such a way, diversity, whether in terms of race or gender and sexual orientation, begins to influence paths distinct from the norm or the standard…
Yes, we have several examples, like the recent documentary “Cabaré Eldorado,” that demonstrate how queer culture is at the forefront of cultural transformations. Today, I think a lot about the safe spaces within the queer community, places where Black individuals feel safe, and architecture’s power in this context. Something is fascinating when we intersect architecture with issues of race and gender. Through them, there’s enormous potential for discussing new architectures. And, of course, technology is intertwined with all of this. So, investigating the possibilities of architecture that deviates from the norms – that can be seen as spaces of collectivity, of connection – historically, these have been the domains of the queer and Black communities. In terms of architecture, these spaces are where a revolution is taking place.
Beyond technology, using natural elements is quite prevalent in your practice. How does nature inspire you amidst digital advancements?
The more technologically immersed I become, the more connected I feel to my ancestry and the natural environment. I grew up in the countryside, and I played surrounded by nature during my childhood. It’s an environment that has always profoundly influenced my imagination and creativity. Despite becoming increasingly cosmopolitan later on, I’ve been reconnecting more and more with nature, which has unfolded in my projects.
When we talk about the future, we look at ancestral peoples, and many of them talk about cycles. So, looking to the future also means looking back, encompassing the present and the past. And that makes sense. For example, when we talk about 3D printing in architecture, and it’s done with biodegradable materials, we are essentially doing what was done in the past.
Today, we have knowledge and evidence that there were once large cities in the Amazon. Settlements with over 300,000 people were so sophisticated that they left no traces. Only now, through carbon scanning, are we beginning to uncover this history. Therefore, for us Brazilians, there’s something potent in this new and urgent architecture because we are culturally connected to something beyond the material. Brazilians, in general, are highly spiritual and can have an expanded field of vision and connect with ancestral values.
And from this perspective, we must look to nature and understand that the future lies within it. We can’t continue to build from non-renewable sources. As Ailton Krenak says, we’re killing everything, we’re killing the rivers. We can’t keep going like this.
The construction industry is the second-largest polluting industry, second only to aviation. What role do architects play in this? We need to spread the message and openly acknowledge that we can’t keep building with concrete. It’s not enough to create a ‘sustainable’ house with solar panels, LED lighting, and a bunch of green-certified furniture if the entire house is made of concrete, with Black labor – paid a pittance and working in precarious conditions – to build a high-end home, and then seeking certification to label it as sustainable.
So, this return to nature is about developing renewable architecture and adopting biodegradable materials. Additionally, there’s the concept of biophilia. How can we integrate architecture into nature? Why aren’t architects investigating this enough? In a country like Brazil, where everything grows, why do the most of new developments ignore this?
In my practice, nature enters holistically, tied to ancestry and as a fundamental factor in discussing the future. In my studio, we reached a point where, two years ago, we stopped building with concrete and started exploring other alternatives.
We see this in some projects, such as the Dolce Gusto Neo and Zissou Flagships. In these projects, material innovation takes center stage. How does this material aspect permeate the design process of your firm?
There’s a creative ingredient in my team, and it’s the pursuit of innovation. Creating innovation takes time and research. That’s why we’ve opened up a dedicated research front and seen some incredible materials emerging. We need to organize ourselves to support and encourage the companies responsible for these innovations. For instance, cladding blocks are emerging from discarded fabrics, Brazilian startups working with mycelium and producing CNC-cuttable panels, and biodegradable polymers derived from insects.
There’s a material revolution that needs to be industrialized and scaled up. As architects, we also need to support these projects. I always emphasize this in meetings with my clients, suggesting that when a brand supports a project like this, it’s helping an innovation ecosystem. After all, to create a project like this, you need to activate research, universities, and suppliers. So, when we develop a work with these materials, we stimulate and activate an innovation network. It’s not just about making a store look beautiful; it goes beyond that.
You’ve always been closely connected to technological issues, and there’s a current issue that can’t be ignored: how do you see Artificial Intelligence influencing the architectural profession?
I think there’s a lot of potential, and I believe it will profoundly impact architectural education and the training of architects. I do think it will democratize architecture. Today, I already have clients who come with the image of Midjourney, and I have students from other fields at Sorbonne in Paris who don’t know how to draw but can now express themselves through images. And that’s the power of democratization. Not to mention how, with a smartphone, people can now scan their environment and get a sense of what can be done with it. So, the clients themselves will carry out part of the design process. Architecture will be profoundly transformed. Some architects are afraid and feel threatened by this. I look at it with a certain fascination because it could take architecture to places we haven’t yet imagined.
This article is part of the ArchDaily Topics: Design Process, proudly presented by Codesign, the first purpose-built iPad app for the concept design stage of the architectural process.
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Home Photography Nature Photographer of the Year The story behind the photo: ‘Swamped Skies’ by Joshua Rozells
By AG STAFF • September 26, 2023
‘Swamped Skies’ by Joshua Rozells
This forms part of a series of Q&As with winning photographers from this year’s Australian Geographic Nature Photographer of the Year awards.
Joshua Rozells was crowned the winner of the ‘Our Impact’ category in the 2023 Australian Geographic Nature Photographer of the Year (AGNPOTY) competition.
His winning image, titled ‘Swamped Skies’, shows light pollution caused by satellites in the sky above Western Australia’s Pinnacles Desert.
Can you tell us the back story of this photo?
This photo was taken on an astrophotography trip I went out on in early 2022 to the Pinnacles, Western Australia. The photo was originally meant to be a star trail but I changed it to show the amount of satellites in the night sky after I reviewed the photos. The photo shows the impact that satellites are having on our natural night sky. It is an issue that did not exist until a few years ago. It is an issue that is increasing at an alarming rate due to the exponential rise in the amount of satellites that have been launched into Earth’s orbit in recent years.
What is your connection to the subject matter?
As a hobbyist astrophotographer, satellites are increasingly becoming a problem. There hasn’t been a night of astrophotography that has gone by that I haven’t captured satellites in my photos and the issue has progressively gotten worse. For astrophotographers like myself, satellites are a nuisance but not a deal breaker. Even though I don’t like satellites in my photos, I can deal with satellites in my photos or Photoshop them out of my photos if I really want to. But for astronomers, it is becoming a problem that is impacting their ability to conduct astronomy research.
Where is it taken, and what led you to this site?
The photo was taken at the Pinnacles. Between the dark skies and the unique limestone structures, it is is one of the most amazing locations for astrophotography in Western Australia! I have been to the Pinnacles many times to do astrophotography.
Were you unexpectedly there or had you planned to cover this moment?
The shot was taken unexpectedly; I had originally gone to the Pinnacles to do a star trail. When I was out in the field I noticed that there were a few satellites in the sky but didn’t think much about it. It was only when I got home and reviewed the photos that I noticed the sheer amount of satellites that were present in the sky that night. Once I realised how many satellites were in the sky I decided that I would edit the photo to show the amount of satellites rather than editing it into a star trail.
What are the technical challenges of photographing this kind of scene?
Lots of planning is required for astrophotography to take place and all the planning can quickly come undone if the weather doesn’t cooperate. I often plan my astrophotography trips months in advance to ensure that I get the best photo possible.
How did you prepare to take this image?
Going out for an astrophotography trip always requires a fair bit of preparation. Firstly, I checked the moon’s luminosity and rising/setting time to find a night that there would be a night without any moonlight to make sure the stars are more visible. A few days before the trip I had to check the weather conditions (most importantly the cloud coverage and wind conditions) to make sure that the conditions would be good for astrophotography. I arrived at the Pinnacles during daylight so that I could scout out a good location at the Pinnacles to take the photo. Finally, I set up the camera on a tripod and attached an intervalometer to take consecutive photos.
Did you have special equipment?
Other than the camera and tripod, I used an intervalometer to enable the camera to take consecutive photos. I also used two panel lights to light up the Pinnacle in the foreground.
Have you covered this topic/subject before?
I have not done a photo that showed the amount of satellites in the sky before.
Why is this form of photography important to you?
Astrophotography is important to me because it helps me to see what the human eye cannot see. As a Christian it also helps me to reflect on the greatness of God; I’m always in awe of His magnificent creation when I’m out stargazing. When I’m out stargazing I can’t help but to meditate on the Bible passage Psalm 19:1, which says “The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands”.
Any additional thoughts?
This photo clearly shows the impact that satellites are having on our night sky. The proliferation of satellites is increasingly becoming a problem for astronomers. In 2021, over 1700 spacecrafts and satellites were launched into orbit. Light pollution caused by SpaceX’s Starlink satellites are the worst offenders as they are low Earth orbit satellites, and they travel in satellite trains. One can only assume the issue will exponentially increase in the next few years, with SpaceX alone intending to launch over 40,000 satellites in total. The space industry is almost entirely unregulated, with no limits on the amount of satellites that anyone is able to launch and there is currently no regulation in place to minimise the light pollution they cause. Organisations such as the International Astronomical Union’s Center for the Protection of the Dark and Quiet Sky are advocating for the regulation and protection of the night sky. But more needs to be done by the space industry, governments, and NGOs so that we can all enjoy the beauty of the natural night sky for generations to come.
Related: Winners: 2023 Australian Geographic Nature Photographer of the Year
(MENAFN- AsiaNet News) When you travel, you have many chances to take amazing photos and videos. It doesn’t count if you’re a freshman or an expert. These tips will assist you in getting the most out of your travels and keeping fantastic visual memories
Charge up Those Batteries
Imagine you reach the top of a cliff after a full day of hiking and you are lucky enough to witness the beauty of an orange sun setting behind those cloud-covered mountains. You take out your phone to capture the scene and launch the camera app and it doesn’t open because the battery is below 5%. What a bummer! So, whether you are an amateur phone photographer or a pro with fancy gear, never forget to power up your devices. Plug them in any time you get a chance.
Look for Golden Hours
Golden hour is a period in a day when the sun is low on the horizon. The rays of the sun have to travel longer through the earth’s atmosphere. In simple terms, the natural light of the sun is warm, soft and diffused at this time, making it the favourite of photographers. Use this time, to add a magical and heavenly touch to your photos and videos. The duration of this hour depends on the season and weather of the place. But it is usually the period shortly after sunrise and before sunset.
Learn Basic Composition
In photography and videography, composition refers to a certain way of placing the object in the frame. Our brain finds a picture with good composition more visually effective and aesthetically appealing than others. While there is a long list of compositional techniques, beginners can start with – the rule of thirds, leading lines and symmetry.
Capturing Beyond Yourself
Though showing your face in videos and taking selfies is a trend, don’t let yourself take the largest space in the frame. After all, you are capturing a “story” of a new destination through your photos and videos. So don’t shy away from showing the local life and culture of a place. Take those candid shots of busy markets and people going on about their day. Talk to locals in your videos and if required ask them if they are comfortable being in the frame.
Shoot in Different Modes
If you are using a digital camera for photography, use the RAW mode instead of JPEG. RAW files contain more information on visual elements than JPEG, thus giving you the freedom to be artistic while editing. For videos, experiment with different modes like slow motion, time-lapse, hyper-lapse etc. These modes are also available these days in any decent smartphone camera app.
Try Different Angles
While an eye-level placing of the camera does just fine, shooting from different angles adds depth as well as a different perspective to the story you are capturing. So, get down low, shoot from high above or tilt the camera and see what works the best.
Investing on Gear
The trend is “travel vlogging”. So, for the ones who are planning to put their money into equipment, start with the very basics. If you only have a phone with a camera app, buy a decent selfie stick or a gorilla pod. These devices help in avoiding shakes in photos and videos. The stick of selfie sticks are extendable so they give a wider view of the scene while with gorilla pods you can place the phone anywhere you want. More enthusiastic photographers with digital and mirrorless cameras should buy a good storage device and a sturdy tripod or monopod as basics.
Research about The Places
It is better to make an itinerary of places you want to visit. Doing so has two benefits for photographers. First, it gives you an idea of the place you are going to visit. While travelling, you can think of ways to record or capture the scene. Second, it saves you from wasting the crucial time that you must use for exploring and capturing rather than planning.
Last but not least, in the enthusiasm of documenting your travels, don’t forget to enjoy and live the experiences. After all, the best camera is our own eye and the best stories emerge out of our memories.
ALSO READ: World Tourism Day 2023: Solo traveler’s toolkit – A look at 10 safety and adventure hacks
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Unnecessary plastic packaging on grapes is causing an uproar on social media.
In a recent post on the r/Anticonsumption subreddit, a user uploaded a photo from a grocery store that shows a sample platter of plastic cups containing two grapes each, accompanied by a sign that says, “Try a sample. Please use tongs or a toothpick.”
“Take two grapes and then throw away some plastic, nice,” the user wrote in their caption.
It’s just one of countless examples of pointless plastic waste in supermarkets.
Plastic waste is one of the greatest environmental hazards that our planet faces. Studies suggest that in 2016, there was about 267 million tons of plastic waste worldwide — equivalent to about 24 trillion 10-gram plastic bottles, according to the World Bank. The volume of liquid that these bottles could hold could fill up 2,400 Olympic stadiums, 4.8 million Olympic-size swimming pools, or 40 billion bathtubs, as the World Bank’s site pointed out.
The weight of this waste is roughly equivalent to about 3.4 million adult blue whales or 1,376 Empire State Buildings combined.
Plastic waste sticks around in our environment for hundreds of years, meaning it corrupts ecosystems far longer than other kinds of waste. It takes at least 450 years for plastic water bottles to break down in nature, according to the World Wildlife Fund.
Plastic can have toxic effects on human health, as studies have shown that exposure to the substance can lead to respiratory issues, reproductive problems, and even cancer, according to the Geneva Environment Network. Clearly, the more plastic that clutters our planet, the worse off its inhabitants will be.
Users shared their disgust with the plastic grape samples in the comment section of the original post.
“Where the hell is this? Maybe they think this is being sanitary? Also, why does someone need to sample grapes? You never had a grape before? It’s not like these will have come from the bunch you’re considering buying. This is driving me mad. This should be illegal,” one user wrote.
“Seems like a futile attempt to keep gross people from eating produce. … I saw a lady chowing down on a plum the other day. So gross,” another user said.
“Well I wouldn’t want my grapes to touch other grapes, that would be disgusting,” a third user sarcastically commented.
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