The last few years have been traveling years for me. This means time in restaurants. Sometimes alone. Waiting for food. Or with a crowd out eating, but alone inside. Either way, what better time to play with photography and glassware? Here are some of my favorites…
After a long day walking the Camino, I stopped at a small hamlet for a meal and bed. Watching the trees from the perspective of a glass of wine I felt I was in touch with a holistic sense of the world, and that everything would be integrated and alright:
In a French brasserie they take their glassware and bottles seriously. I got up from my culinary meditation over an excellent cassoulet and photographed these blue bottles at the bar:
Blue or green, what’s in a color? Apparently, this depends on the shadows against a stucco wall:
Bottles come in ones and twos, and perhaps the Pepper Shaker enjoys a colloquy with the water bottle in this Maine waterfront restaurant:
Across the spectrum red is possible as well as blues and greens at this informal place in Paris:
Sometimes the cutlery likes to get into the game, and the spoon is reflected in a polished, reflective carafe in Germany:
It’s a short leap from spoons refracted in a reflection to a place setting reflected in a napkin holder at a roadside rest in Portugal:
Other times things can get rowdy as when I lined up these glasses at an end-of-workshop party in Heidelberg:
I photographed this glass and carafe in a cafe on the main square of Monpazier, one of Acquitaine’s signature bastides (you can see the covered market structure through the open doors):
Neither white nor red, but definitely a good watercolor subject:
At a romantic, candle-lit restaurant in Germany I made an abstraction of a candle refracted in a drinking glass. The glass was green and held some kind of fancy drink. The shape of the green glass occupies the right side of the image:
In the historic Ferry Building, in downtown San Francisco:
Waiting for service in a restaurant near Valletta, Malta:
Paint-it-darker patterns and magnification with a beaded placemat in a casual Dordogne restaurant in Brantome, France:
In Bourges, France, I was primarily interested in the differing way the shadow from my glass fell on the table cloth as opposed to the way the shadow fell on the wood of the table itself. The bright, curved lines within the shadow are created by bright reflections off the water in the wine glass, but they aren’t quite aligned at the borders of the cloth and wood, due to the differing refractive qualities of the two surfaces:
A different phenomenon of light and shadow is to be found in this glass of wine, with the sunlight coming through an awning in Varenna, Italy, where I was enjoying a late lunch beside the Lago di Como with my good friend Mauro:
No matter where you are, and what you are doing, you can always find interesting visual subjects, things to photograph, and ways to make art. Olé!
Pingback: Poltergeist – Harold Davis