two materials that are used heavily in the building of structures because of their strength are shown being withered away. even after being chipped away over years of facing the elements, the structure still stands, perhaps a bit weaker, but standing nonetheless.
comparable perhaps to our lives as human beings. we face trials and tribulations and grow old over the years, but a weathered figure does not denote a weathered soul.
the bold color is exquisite and serves to keep the photo from becoming something bleak. it also accentuates the distressed surface of the stone and weathered appearance of the wood.
i dont quite understand the meaning of this picture..but as boo radley states i believe you can compare them to our lives as humans..we wither away little by little but in the end we still stand strong..we still fight. Thats what the building is doing standing strong even though its starting to fall apart.
The stone and the wood seem to be placed together by force outside of the original construction. It appears as if it is two pictured shown together.
They speak to me of the nature of humans, we build our inner beings using emotion and reason, the killed wood and never living stone. though they exist with each other neither ever existed as the other one did, Alive and now dead or never alive at all, and can never dictate to the other what they must do.
Reason can not change emotions, emotions are irrational yet only exist temporarily, they die and become memories of themselves.
3 comments:
two materials that are used heavily in the building of structures because of their strength are shown being withered away. even after being chipped away over years of facing the elements, the structure still stands, perhaps a bit weaker, but standing nonetheless.
comparable perhaps to our lives as human beings. we face trials and tribulations and grow old over the years, but a weathered figure does not denote a weathered soul.
the bold color is exquisite and serves to keep the photo from becoming something bleak. it also accentuates the distressed surface of the stone and weathered appearance of the wood.
i dont quite understand the meaning of this picture..but as boo radley states i believe you can compare them to our lives as humans..we wither away little by little but in the end we still stand strong..we still fight. Thats what the building is doing standing strong even though its starting to fall apart.
The stone and the wood seem to be placed together by force outside of the original construction. It appears as if it is two pictured shown together.
They speak to me of the nature of humans, we build our inner beings using emotion and reason, the killed wood and never living stone. though they exist with each other neither ever existed as the other one did, Alive and now dead or never alive at all, and can never dictate to the other what they must do.
Reason can not change emotions, emotions are irrational yet only exist temporarily, they die and become memories of themselves.
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