Cool
Be Vigilant
The restored fire lookout at Martis PEak reminds us that we need to be vigilant during the dry season. This lookout station has views of Truckee, Northstar and the Northern reaches of the Lake Tahoe Basin.
Shaped by the Tides
About an hour South of San Francisco, I found this beach. Over time the tides have made these pock marks in the rocks.
Marked by Time
Walking along the coast, in Pescadero there were these cool rocks eroded by the tide.
More Fun in the Dark
Lowered the color temperature to 2800 Kelvin. It brings out the blue tones. The hotel at Rockaway beach illuminates the waves.
Pacifica
Ventured out to get in some night photography shots. This is Pacifica, CA, the lights in the far background come from freeway just beyond the hill.
Moonbeams & Cupid’s Span
Taken at along San Francisco’s Embarcadero. Cupid’s Span to the right, the Bay Bridge in the background.
Statement by the Artists (Cupid’s Span)
Inspired by San Francisco’s reputation as the home port of Eros, we began our project for a small park on the Embarcadero along San Francisco Bay by trying out the subject of Cupid’s stereotypical bow and arrow. The first sketches were made of the subject with the bowstring drawn back, poised on the feathers of the arrow, which pointed up to the sky.
When Coosje van Bruggen found this position too stiff and literal, she suggested turning the image upside down: the arrow and the central part of the bow could be buried in the ground, and the tail feathers, usually downplayed, would be the focus of attention. That way the image became metamorphic, looking like both a ship and a tightened version of a suspension bridge, which seemed to us the perfect accompaniment to the site. In addition, the object functioned as a frame for the highly scenic situation, enclosing — depending on where one stood — either the massed buildings of the city’s downtown or the wide vista over the water and the Bay Bridge toward the distant mountains.
As a counterpoint to romantic nostalgia, we evoked the mythological account of Eros shooting his arrow into the earth to make it fertile. The sculpture was placed on a hill, where one could imagine the arrow being sunk under the surface of plants and prairie grasses. By slanting the bow’s position, Coosje added a sense of acceleration to the Cupid’s Span. Seen from its “stern,” the bow-as-boat seems to be tacking on its course toward the white tower of the city’s Ferry Building.





