On Saturday February 26, 2012 I was lucky enough to be in Toronto, Ontario during the weekend when the Bloor-Yorkville Icefest was going on. The ice sculptures and surrounding decor were simply gorgeous, a fine art photographer’s wet dream I dare say. A friend of mine told me about the sculptures which were in a very popular part of town where parking spots are as rare as flawless diamonds. After looking for parking for 15 minutes, I got fed up and almost left to shoot elsewhere. But I got trapped in a bumper to bumper traffic jam (a huge pet peeve) and it seemed like my only way out was a parking garage with a 15 dollar charge. Well thankfully I just sighed and parked because it was by far the best 15 dollar investment of my weekend.
The area was packed with people getting really close to the ice sculptures and packed with pissed off photographers who wanted to take unobstructed (people free) images of the ice-sculptures. As for myself, I was enthralled after the first frame. For me, the people added a level of abstraction to the photographs that made them much more interesting to my eye. They were unknowingly interacting with the ice sculptures for me. I shot there for about 30 minutes as different people entered and exited the scene and I tried different angles to get as much variety as I could.
I’d like to thank the city of Toronto as well as the event’s sponsors for putting on such a visually awesome event. Here are my 4 favourite photos from the shoot.
2 Comments
The translucent “feel” you have achieved with these images is wonderful. And I agree the use of the figures does add another connection for the viewer. Great decisions.
Thanks so much for the compliment Michael! Coming from you it’s high praise indeed.