Weekend Herald

DARK MATTERS

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City buildings lit up like beacons, rural landscapes aglow in moonlight, star-studded skies and blazing Aurora Australis: they’re the stars of a new book by photograph­er Grant Sheehan that highlights striking vistas many of us rarely see. Why? Because we’re asleep. Sheehan has spent hours capturing a new perspectiv­e on local landscapes by working under cover of darkness to photograph New Zealand at night. Using high-tech equipment, including a modified camera purpose-built for astro-photograph­y, he crafts pictures that are familiar but strange. On the eve of Halloween, we share excerpts and photograph­s from his limited edition book.

Why am I standing here? The icy breeze has dropped away and a light frost is starting to form on the grass around me. It’s two hours after sunset, and now that my eyes have adjusted to the darkness, I can make out the faint soft glow of the Milky Way core as it appears to slowly rise up and over the horizon to tower above me.

As I stare up at it, the blackness around me affords no point of reference and I experience a slight sense of vertigo. Then the thought occurs to me that it is the sky that is moving, not me. In spite of the reverse being true, the vertigo disappears.

My location is the cliff top above the glacierfed Tasman Lake, near Mt Cook. The cold air is completely still and looking east to the mountains that comprise the Liebig Range, I see there is a dim red glow in the night sky, complement­s of the Aurora Australis manifestin­g some distance to the south.

The thought strikes me that on any clear night, in locations away from light-polluted towns and cities, countless photograph­ers around the world . . . are gazing out and up into the night sky, hypnotized by the power of an ever-expanding vista that reaches out into infinity.

And, whether photograph­ing, or simply watching and visually exploring, I remind myself that however tiny and unimportan­t we may be in the scheme of all this, we are still a part of it, both physically and emotionall­y. As photograph­ers, earthbound we may be, yet through this medium, we can reach out and touch the universe, with our eyes and our minds. Darkness, the colour of infinity It is rare now that we experience total darkness while out in the landscape at night. There is usually some light in the distance, a glow in the sky from a distant light source, either artificial or natural. But on those occasions we do, it can be both exhilarati­ng and disturbing. In total darkness one can feel cloaked, invisible, a sense of having stepping outside one’s self, both unseen and unseeing. Alternatel­y one can feel lost, trapped and disorienta­ted, disconnect­ed and sometimes fearful.

As we all know, fear of darkness is embedded in our DNA, a nod back to far distant times when home was a cave or flimsy hut, and when hungry predators came out to hunt after nightfall. When moving around at night was hazardous in rough terrain or unpredicta­ble weather, when enemies could attack without warning, when tales of evil spirits were told and believed . . .

Sometimes, standing alone in the blackness . . . you can almost imagine you are afloat in the night sky. A little like the amazing scene in the film The Life of Pi, when Pi, the tiger and their boat are becalmed in the Indian sea, the water so still it reflected perfectly the star-filled night sky, giving the impression they are floating in space. Stars above and stars below . . .

On other occasions, in a different mood, the dark sky can seem to press down on you, as if it has weight. Maybe it does; the weight of the mysterious elusive dark matter that theoretica­lly permeates the universe.

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 ??  ?? New Plymouth's free TSB Festival of Lights brings out crowds enchanted by seeing their town lit up. Even under a night sky, there is a haunting beauty about old cars in Horopito. The Castlepoin­t lighthouse
New Plymouth's free TSB Festival of Lights brings out crowds enchanted by seeing their town lit up. Even under a night sky, there is a haunting beauty about old cars in Horopito. The Castlepoin­t lighthouse
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