Photographer’s Note
.
In southeast Beijing, they built an altar to offer sacrifices to heaven, named Temple of Heaven, completed in 1420. This temple is famous as "no nails or pegs" used in the original construction nor in the restoration after the lightning hit in 1889. I don’t know why China has another altar on Mt. Qingxiu — 5 kilometers away from the southeast of the city of Nanning, as in the picture I share with you today. Since ancient times, Qingxiu Shan (Blue Mountain Scenic Area) has been a famous summer resort and tourist attraction in the south of Yongjiang River.
I am sorry that I don’t have enough documents to confirm if they used this altar on the winter solstice and in the first month of the lunar calendar to worship, offer sacrifices to heaven, and to pray for good harvests — as in the Temple of Heaven.
Also, I am in the medical field, so all I was told about this site is about ying and yan, the five elements, hexagrams and the eight possible trigrams (bát quái) as in following:
||| Force (qián) = heaven
::: Field (kun) = earth
|:: Shake (zhèn) = thunder
:|: Gorge (kan) = water
::| Bound (gèn) = mountain
:|| Ground (xùn) = wind
|:| Radiance (lí) = fire
||: Open (duì) = swamp
The first three lines, the lower trigram, are seen as the inner aspect of the change that is occurring. The upper trigram, the last three lines, are the outer aspect. The change described is thus the dynamic of the inner (personal) aspect relating to the outer (external) situation. Thus, hexagram 04 :|:::| Enveloping, is composed of the inner trigram :|: Gorge, relating to the outer trigram ::| Bound.
- For more info, please refer to the following links:
Yin and Yang
The 5 elements
Chinese fortune calendar
More about Yin and yang
Chinese philosophers
Hai khí Âm Dương
Bát Quái
- For additional detail, please use this book:
The Book of Changes : Zhouyi A Bronze Age Document
Reading the above, I got lost than gain understanding. If you have a simplified info for me to learn, I sincerely appreciate it.
.
pbernardon, ngythanh, joseelias has marked this note useful
Critiques | Translate
ngythanh
(8496) 2005-06-19 5:29
To me, the picture has not been at maximum result in term of colors and light, but the composition is perfect. Looks like you have in mind the accompanying text before capturing it into the camera.
Thank you very much for this wonderful contribution.
Regards,
Stepan
(27175) 2005-06-19 13:17
Not your best pic, but the pov is original and I like it, especially with the orange roof. It's an interesting composition.
I regret the way you focused and the fact it's maybe overexposed...
Stéphane
jajko
(572) 2005-06-20 2:59
przepiekny dach. super . no i widok dosc zaawansowanie wysoko. fajne zdjecie. podoba sie. szkoda tylko ze ludzi tam jak mrowek pelno :)
pozdrawiam, lukasz.
ps. cos zablokowali mi mordki zielone :)
joseelias
(367) 2005-06-26 15:23
This is a very nice POV on this place. I like how you’ve used the roof at the left to help frame and focus in the altar. Also, it looks like an interesting place to visit by your photo and note.
Regarding the image, you could rotate it just a bit to the left, and maybe crop a bit from the top to eliminate the space in top of the roof as it looks a bit distracting. Maybe cropping the whole vendors area could be a good idea, as this way you could rotate the image more and make the altar more parallel with the photo border in bottom and top. Some more sharpness in the altar area would be good too.
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Huy V Tran (huynt)
(5077) - Genre: Places
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2004-05-02
- Categories: Architecture
- Camera: Canon PowerShot S400
- Exposure: f/7.1, 1/160 seconds
- More Photo Info: view
- Photo Version: Original Version
- Date Submitted: 2005-06-19 4:50
Discussions
- To joseelias: Thanks (1)
by huynt, last updated 06-26 22:47 - To jajko: Hi (1)
by huynt, last updated 06-20 18:46 - To Stepan: Hi (1)
by huynt, last updated 06-19 18:28








