Stark steel frame frame canyon neon light in the distance near. Crane has remained for years weaving over rusted construction site. Semi-finished buildings designed for the use of hundreds to thousands of people daily around disruptive without the people.
Here are pictures of haunting, otherworldly in "To the Neon God they made," photographic exhibition at the cultural centre of Winchester, 3130 s. McLeod Drive.
My old friend Michael Monson and Tony Flanagan started the project two years ago. Flanagan, who teaches photography at Coronado High School, and Monson, who teaches English and creative writing in the United Kingdom's Spring Valley High School, was brainstorming ideas for the photography student projects. Inspired by killing the story of major building projects to a standstill, they dreamed up the concept for the show.
A couple of pictures including a picture of a dynamic low clouds over the city. Shooting on a cloudy evening was a happy accident. The couple worked on the project as their schedules permitted, usually appears on a property at around 10 p.m. and fired from some angles.
"Depending on the building," Monson said. "We found only one corner of which we are working at the Wyndham (blue desert), fell near Rio. Vantage Lofts in Henderson, on the other hand, we shot from many angles and we ended up using four of them in print. It's very photogenic. "