Shan Light: Choreographing Time and Illumination

Shannon Quinn’s photograph, taken at Void Studios, symbolizes the photographer’s exploration of long-exposure light painting in collaboration with a dancer. The composition highlights a figure in black, illuminated by vibrant light trails, merging technical skill with performance. This work exemplifies an ongoing artistic journey, emphasizing collaboration and the evolution of creative expression.

Studio portrait of go-go dancer Shannon Quinn wearing a blue wig and dark outfit, surrounded by curved orange light trails created through long-exposure light painting.
Shannon Quinn (ShanOSteel) photographed at Void Studios Denver during a collaborative light painting and long-exposure studio session.

In this striking image from Chapter 6 of Greg Urbano’s Top 100 Journey—titled “The Road Ahead: Recent Work & Ongoing Exploration”—the photographer ventures into territory that merges technical experimentation with performative energy. Shot at Void Studios in Denver during a collaborative session with dancer Shannon Quinn, the photograph represents a deliberate pivot toward long-exposure light painting, a technique the photographer had not previously explored in a controlled studio environment.

The composition centers on a figure clad in black with a blue-toned wig, positioned against a muted backdrop while wielding LED wands that trace vivid arcs of orange and yellow light through space. The long exposure—achieved through rear curtain sync flash combined with continuous LED sources—captures both the frozen stillness of the subject and the kinetic energy of movement, creating a visual paradox that challenges our perception of time. The metallic sheen of the vest catches ambient light, adding textural contrast to the otherwise shadow-heavy figure, while knee-high boots ground the composition in the physical realm even as the light trails suggest something ethereal.

What distinguishes this work within the photographer’s evolving practice is its collaborative foundation. Unlike many studio portraits that position the photographer as sole author, this image emerges from a dialogue between creator and performer. Quinn’s background as a go-go dancer informs the dynamic posture and confident spatial awareness visible in the frame. The choreography of light becomes inseparable from the choreography of the body, suggesting that technical mastery alone cannot produce such results—it requires a willing, skilled collaborator who understands how to perform for extended exposures.

The technical apparatus employed here—a Nikon Z7ii paired with Godox TL30 LED wands and an AD100 strobe—speaks to a hybrid approach that balances ambient light sculpting with decisive flash illumination. Rear curtain sync ensures that the sharpest rendering of the subject occurs at the end of the exposure, allowing motion blur and light trails to accumulate before the final moment of clarity. This reversal of typical flash timing creates a sense of forward momentum, as though the figure is moving into her frozen state rather than away from it.

Within the context of Chapter 6, this photograph embodies the spirit of its subtitle: ongoing exploration. The photographer’s willingness to attempt unfamiliar techniques in a new setting demonstrates an artistic practice that refuses stagnation. Rather than retreating to established strengths, the work here shows someone leaning into uncertainty, using collaboration as a catalyst for discovery.

The color palette—dominated by warm oranges against cool blues and deep blacks—creates a retro-futuristic aesthetic that recalls both 1980s cyberpunk imagery and contemporary LED performance art. Yet the image avoids pastiche. Instead, it synthesizes influences into something distinctly contemporary, a visual language appropriate for documenting this moment in the photographer’s trajectory.

As part of a curated selection representing his strongest work, this image signals not arrival but continuation. It captures the photographer mid-journey, experimenting with new tools and partnerships, documenting not just a subject but a process of becoming. The road ahead, as the chapter title suggests, remains open—and this photograph marks one compelling point along that route.

Boulder Theater Marquee: Neon Vernacular and Urban Memory

The Boulder Theater marquee in Colorado signifies a shift in the photographer’s focus from grand landscapes to community identity through vernacular architecture. The vibrant neon colors and design highlight cultural memory and urban vitality, capturing the theater as a living space that merges historical aesthetics with contemporary relevance, reflecting the complexity of Colorado’s identity.

Neon-lit marquee of the Boulder Theater viewed from below against a deep blue evening sky.
The illuminated neon marquee of the Boulder Theater glows at night in Boulder, Colorado.

Within Chapter 3 of the Top 100 Journey—Colorado Landscapes & Cityscapes—this vibrant study of the Boulder Theater marquee represents a deliberate shift in the photographer’s engagement with place. Moving beyond natural terrain and monumental civic architecture, he turns his attention to vernacular structures that anchor community identity. The theater marquee, with its layered neon typography and saturated color palette, becomes a subject through which to examine cultural memory, commercial aesthetics, and the relationship between preservation and vitality in Colorado’s urban fabric.

The composition exploits the dramatic convergence of neon signage against the deepening blue hour sky. Shot at 28mm with the Sony FE 28-70mm f/3.5-5.6 OSS kit lens, the wide angle captures the marquee’s full architectural gesture—the sweeping curves of blue neon tubing that frame the illuminated message board, the iconic “Boulder” script rendered in brilliant red and orange, and the classic Art Deco detailing that situates this structure within a specific historical moment. The exposure settings—f/5.6 at 1/125s, ISO 400—balance ambient light with the intense luminosity of the neon, preventing blown highlights while maintaining detail in the surrounding architecture.

Color becomes the image’s primary narrative force. The red-to-orange gradient of the “Boulder” lettering contrasts sharply with the cool blue neon below, creating complementary tension that draws the eye across the frame. The yellow marquee board, studded with bulbs and announcing “BOOMTOWN DEMO D,” introduces a third chromatic element while grounding the image in specificity and time. This is not a sanitized historical recreation but a working theater captured mid-programming, its marquee functioning as intended—communication, invitation, spectacle.

The photographer’s decision to include surrounding context—the modern glass facade rising behind the vintage marquee, the darkening sky, the subtle presence of street elements—situates the theater within its contemporary environment rather than isolating it as nostalgic artifact. This approach speaks to his evolving methodology within the chapter, where place is understood not as static subject but as palimpsest, layered with temporal and cultural inscriptions. The Boulder Theater, a 1906 structure renovated and preserved, embodies this complexity: historic form activated by present-day use.

The low vantage point emphasizes the marquee’s projecting geometry, its thrust into public space. This compositional choice transforms signage into sculpture, highlighting the physicality of mid-century commercial architecture. The neon tubing, with its visible mounting hardware and electrical infrastructure, reveals construction and craft—elements often obscured in more polished architectural photography but celebrated here as integral to authenticity.

Within the broader trajectory of Chapter 3, the Boulder Theater image functions as cultural counterpoint to wilderness landscapes and governmental monuments. It represents Colorado’s smaller-scale urban centers, places where preservation efforts maintain continuity with architectural heritage while accommodating contemporary cultural production. The theater becomes microcosm—a site where community gathers, where entertainment and commerce intersect, where historical aesthetics remain relevant.

The photographer captures not merely a building but an experience of place, translating the visceral impact of neon light into two-dimensional form. In doing so, he documents Colorado’s layered identity: natural grandeur, civic aspiration, and the quieter vernacular spaces where daily life unfolds. The marquee, brilliant against evening sky, asserts that urban landscapes possess their own compelling beauty—electric, temporal, human-scaled, and essential to understanding the full spectrum of place.