Friday, May 22, 2009

C & H from the outside

From the outside, it's necessary to cross the river to be able to see all of the C&H property at once. I did that one day and spent a few hours on the shore trying to get a photo, or a series of pictures, that would take the whole thing in, without much luck.

C&H from across the strait

From town, you can see the place in pieces; you can see different parts of the property from various places. It sprawls out under the bridges, where you can see it from the Al Zampa bridge ped walk.

Trailers

There is a no-man's land in a few places, where you might be able to claim that you weren't
really trespassing. There's one under the bridges, where people fish without being hassled (so far as I know), and where you can look for interesting grafitti on the boxcars on a siding. This one is behind the museum.

Seein' aich

The Castle City is an integrated tug-and-barge; I think it transports C&H products from the refinery to the Oakland harbor, but I haven't been able to find that out. It's not possible for the public to visit the dock, and it's hard to get a good look at it from outside the C&H lot.

Castle Island

Crockett cogen is a symbiotic appendage at the refinery's east end, next to the dock. It burns natural gas for electricity, and the leftover steam is used to refine sugar. I don't suppose they like visitors, but I'll try to find out.

Crockett Cogen and the shipping dock

No trespassing, no tours, visitors should go away. Private, do ya hear me? I couldn't get on the grounds legally, so I've taken lots of pictures from the outside, looking in. The place seems like a different landscape from the various places where the edge of the lot is accessible.

No, you can't come in

The place is photogenic, depending on where you look: inviting, even, from a safe distance.

C&H

I think these are abandoned silos.

At the C&H sugar refinery...

The refinery can be pretty at night. There are hundreds of lights, and in particular: the giant C&H sugar box, and ...

C&H

...the C&H sign. You can see this from the highway, and probably from the water, but you can't really see it in town. I'm temped to draw some sort of conclusion (or make a presumption, or something) about the attitude of the C&H management towards Crockett. They built a lot of the town, way back when, and employed most of the people who lived in the homes that they had built. Now they seem more insular.

C&H sign

Monday, May 18, 2009

Lethem's _The Ecstasy of Influence_ article

[this isn't finished, but it's all I have]

I think we can't create something meaningful that doesn't define its meaning in terms of existing ideas, so anything meaningful that we create can be seen as plagiarism if you define "plagiarism" strictly enough.

Friday, May 15, 2009

(from the) Strait to the (stone) Chair

I was going to add a couple of other images to the set before it was due, and (surprise!) I ran out of time. So, I'm going to post an alternative set on flickr with extra images in it. Hurray.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

stupid blog

I kept trying to add a post, and the server would just return an error message - so I didn't think it was being posted and I kept trying to add it;

and now, it won't let me delete the extra posts.

Broken internet things suck.

from the strait to the chair

This is the set of pictures for the final project. These aren't print-sized yet.

Carquinez Strait panorama

Al Zampa Bridge Panorama

Highway 4 Eastbound near Martinez

The Trestle


Oak tree over the chair

The oak & the chair

Stone chair

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

The 136 final assignment

Highway 4 Eastbound near Martinez

the Strait to the Chair set on flickr.com.

(Monday, May 18: fixed the link to flickr.)

Saturday, May 9, 2009

If...


If that green thing hadn't been there, and if it the focus was just a little better, then this would be my best duck pond photo ever. And if there weren't those washed-out spots. And if the goslings were a color that would contrast more with the background. Yep.