Tomatos

This photographic composition showcases three tomatoes on a textured wooden surface against a dark background, illustrating the themes of light and form in still life art. Using controlled lighting to create a dramatic chiaroscuro effect, the photographer emphasizes the tomatoes’ beauty, merging classical traditions with contemporary techniques.

Tabletop still life of three ripe tomatoes with water droplets on a wooden surface against a dark background.
A tabletop still life of three tomatoes arranged on a wooden surface and lit against a dark background.

In this deceptively simple composition, the photographer demonstrates how the most humble subjects—three tomatoes from a supermarket produce section—can become vehicles for exploring light, form, and the enduring traditions of still life photography. The work sits comfortably within the classical end of Chapter 5’s spectrum, channeling centuries of artistic precedent while employing decidedly contemporary tools and techniques.

The arrangement recalls Dutch Golden Age vanitas paintings, where ordinary kitchen staples were elevated to subjects of profound contemplation. Here, three ripe tomatoes rest upon a weathered wooden surface, their placement casual yet deliberate. The varying positions of their stems—pointing in different directions like botanical compasses—introduce subtle asymmetry that prevents the composition from becoming static. Water droplets cling to the glossy red skin, suggesting recent washing and adding points of light that animate the surface.

His lighting strategy proves crucial to the image’s success. Working with a single Godox V1s flash modified by a softbox and grid, he achieves remarkable control over illumination. The grid attachment narrows the light spread, creating focused illumination that emphasizes the tomatoes while allowing the background to fall into deep, theatrical darkness. This chiaroscuro effect—the dramatic interplay of light and shadow—lends gravitas to subjects that might otherwise seem merely documentary.

The wooden surface provides essential contextual grounding. Its rough texture and visible grain contrast beautifully with the smooth, taut skin of the tomatoes, creating a dialogue between refined organic form and rustic materiality. The warm tones of the aged wood complement the rich reds of the fruit, establishing a harmonious yet varied color palette that feels both earthy and sophisticated.

His post-processing approach through Skylum Luminar 4, utilizing a color LUT (Look-Up Table), demonstrates an efficient workflow that enhances rather than overwhelms the captured image. The color grading deepens the reds toward burgundy in the shadows while maintaining natural highlights, creating dimensionality that draws the eye around each form. This restrained digital intervention respects the photographic integrity of the scene while amplifying its visual impact.

Within the broader trajectory of his still life work, this image represents a return to fundamentals—a meditation on how controlled lighting and thoughtful composition can transform the everyday into the examined. Where other works in this chapter might push toward experimental territories, this photograph anchors itself in proven traditions, demonstrating that innovation need not always mean departure from established visual language.

The Sony A7ii captures these elements with clarity and subtle tonal gradation, rendering the tomatoes with sufficient detail to appreciate their imperfect spherical forms, the slight variations in color saturation, and the delicate green stems that signal recent harvest. These details matter; they prevent the image from becoming abstract or overly stylized, maintaining its connection to the tangible world.

Ultimately, this work succeeds through its quiet confidence. The photographer understands that compelling still life photography requires neither exotic subjects nor complex staging—only patient observation, technical competence, and an appreciation for how light reveals the inherent beauty in forms we too often overlook. These grocery store tomatoes, frozen in this particular moment of light and shadow, become worthy of sustained attention.

Onions and Garlic: A Study in Chiaroscuro and Culinary Stillness

The photograph captures a still life of onions and garlic on a wooden surface, showcasing classical principles through contemporary techniques. The controlled lighting and asymmetrical balance create depth, while post-processing enhances tonal richness. This artwork engages with historical traditions, revealing how ordinary subjects can convey significant meaning through careful observation and technical precision.

Tabletop still life of whole onions and garlic bulbs arranged on a wooden surface against a dark background.
A tabletop still life of onions and garlic arranged on a wooden surface and lit against a dark background.

In this deliberate composition, the photographer demonstrates a mastery of classical still life principles while working within the constraints of contemporary digital tools. The image presents three bronze-skinned onions accompanied by two heads of garlic, arranged on weathered wood against an impenetrable black void—a setup that immediately recalls the Dutch and Spanish still life traditions of the 17th century, where humble kitchen subjects were elevated to objects of contemplation.

The technical execution reveals a sophisticated understanding of light modulation. Working with a single modified light source—a Godox V1s paired with a softbox and grid—the photographer has created a tightly controlled illumination that wraps around the subjects’ curved surfaces while maintaining crisp shadow definition. The grid attachment proves essential here, preventing light spill into the background and preserving the dramatic contrast that gives the image its gravitas. This economy of means, using just one light to achieve such dimensional modeling, speaks to both practical skill and aesthetic intentionality.

What distinguishes this work within Chapter 5’s progression from classic to experimental tabletop photography is its conscious dialogue with art historical precedent. The photographer acknowledges drawing inspiration from a tutorial source, yet the resulting image transcends mere technical exercise. The onions’ papery skins catch light with a luminosity that suggests both fragility and age, their dried stalks creating gestural elements that break the otherwise spherical regularity. The garlic bulbs, positioned in the lower quadrant, provide tonal counterpoint—their pearl-white surfaces reflecting light with greater intensity than the warmer onions above.

The compositional arrangement follows classical principles of asymmetrical balance. The three onions occupy distinct spatial planes, their positioning creating depth through overlapping forms and subtle scale variation. The leftmost onion’s dramatic upward-reaching stem introduces vertical energy, while the garlic anchors the composition’s base. This triangular organization guides the viewer’s eye through the frame in a measured, contemplative rhythm appropriate to the subject matter.

Post-processing choices, implemented through color grading in Luminar 4, enhance the image’s tonal richness without sacrificing naturalism. The warm amber-to-sienna palette suggests candlelight or late afternoon sun, though the lighting setup confirms neither. This ambiguity of light source contributes to the image’s timeless quality—it could as easily have been captured in a 17th-century Dutch kitchen as in a contemporary studio.

The weathered wooden surface provides crucial textural contrast to the subjects’ organic forms. Its rough grain and worn patina introduce narrative suggestions of use and time, transforming a simple backdrop into an active compositional element. The wood’s horizontal planking creates subtle linear structure beneath the curved biological forms above.

Within the broader context of this chapter’s exploration, this photograph occupies the “classic” end of the spectrum—demonstrating that traditional approaches retain their power when executed with technical precision and compositional intelligence. The work proves that experimentation need not always mean formal rupture; sometimes it involves mining established vocabularies with fresh attention. Here, the photographer engages in a centuries-old conversation about how light reveals form, how arrangement creates meaning, and how the ordinary, when carefully observed, achieves a quiet monumentality that rewards sustained viewing.

Scale and Spectacle: Industrial Heritage as Portrait Stage

Savana Steinhoff’s portrait in front of the Rio Grande 5771 locomotive at the Colorado Railroad Museum showcases Greg Urbano’s artistic vision in environmental portraiture. The photo employs effective lighting, wardrobe choice, and spatial awareness to highlight both model and industrial backdrop, reflecting broader themes of coexistence and cultural significance in contemporary photography.

Woman in a red dress stands in front of a yellow Rio Grande locomotive at night, lit against a dark sky.
Savana Steinhoff poses in front of the Rio Grande 5771 locomotive at the Colorado Railroad Museum in Golden, Colorado.

Among the most ambitious entries in Chapter 4 of Greg Urbano’s Top 100 Journey, this photograph from Portrait Slam 2024 represents the photographer’s engagement with large-scale environmental portraiture under challenging technical conditions. Created at the Colorado Railroad Museum in Golden, the image positions model Savana Steinhoff against the imposing facade of Rio Grande locomotive 5771, transforming industrial artifact into dramatic backdrop and exploring the relationship between human scale and mechanical monumentality.

The composition immediately announces its ambitions. The locomotive dominates the frame, its iconic orange and black striping creating bold graphic elements that could easily overwhelm a human subject. Yet Urbano’s placement of the model—centered beneath the Rio Grande nameplate, her crimson dress echoing the warm tones of the engine—establishes a visual hierarchy that honors both subject and setting. The photographer has chosen a low angle that emphasizes the locomotive’s imposing height while maintaining the model’s presence as the compositional anchor. This decision reflects sophisticated spatial awareness, particularly valuable in workshop environments where multiple photographers compete for optimal vantage points.

The lighting strategy reveals careful planning and execution. Shot during the blue hour, the image captures that transitional moment when artificial illumination and residual daylight achieve balance. The locomotive’s exterior lighting creates warm pools of color against the deepening twilight sky, while additional lighting—likely strobes positioned to camera left—illuminates the model without destroying the ambient atmosphere. Stars visible in the darkening sky suggest either long exposure techniques or composite work in post-processing, adding a dreamlike quality to what might otherwise be straightforward location portraiture.

The choice of wardrobe proves integral to the photograph’s success. The flowing red dress provides both color contrast and movement, its flowing fabric creating visual interest against the rigid geometry of the industrial subject. The model’s pose—casual yet purposeful, one leg slightly forward—suggests confidence rather than confrontation with the massive machine behind her. This approach differs markedly from more aggressive “beauty and the beast” tropes often employed in automotive and industrial photography, opting instead for coexistence rather than contrast.

Within the context of Chapter 4’s documentation of workshop and collaborative shooting experiences, this photograph demonstrates the photographer’s ability to execute complex concepts under time constraints typical of group shooting events. Portrait Slam workshops challenge participants to work efficiently in unfamiliar locations with coordinated models and lighting setups, requiring both technical proficiency and decisive artistic vision. The inclusion of this image in the Top 100 Journey suggests Urbano views such collaborative environments not as limitations but as catalysts for ambitious work.

The photograph also reflects broader themes in contemporary portrait photography, where environmental context carries equal weight to subject representation. The locomotive serves as cultural artifact—a symbol of westward expansion, industrial heritage, and American rail history—while simultaneously functioning as pure visual element. This duality enriches the image beyond simple fashion or glamour photography, situating it within traditions of documentary-informed portraiture.

Ultimately, this work from Portrait Slam 2024 exemplifies the photographer’s mature approach to environmental portraiture: technically sophisticated, conceptually layered, and visually arresting without sacrificing authenticity or becoming mere spectacle.

Denver Union Station Two Trains: Urban Infrastructure as Visual Poetry

The photograph of Denver Union Station marks a shift in the photographer’s journey from natural landscapes to urban architecture. It highlights the interplay of light, color, and geometry while capturing quiet moments in public spaces. The image symbolizes Denver’s evolution in sustainable transit, merging historical preservation with contemporary design.

Two light rail trains sit on parallel tracks beneath the covered platforms at Denver Union Station at night.
Two RTD light rail trains are stopped on adjacent tracks at Denver Union Station in downtown Denver, Colorado.

This nocturnal study of Denver Union Station represents a compelling pivot within Chapter 3 of the photographer’s Top 100 Journey project—a shift from natural landscapes to the constructed geometries of urban infrastructure. Where previous works in this chapter have explored Colorado’s geological grandeur, this image examines the state’s architectural identity through one of its most significant transit hubs.

The composition is defined by bold linear perspective. Shot with a 14-30mm wide-angle lens, the photographer has positioned himself within the transit platform itself, allowing the parallel tracks to create strong diagonal lines that converge toward the vanishing point. This classical use of perspective transforms functional railway infrastructure into formal geometric study. The canopy overhead—a sweeping white lattice of structural supports—echoes and reinforces these diagonals, creating a rhythmic repetition that draws the eye inexorably toward the illuminated train in the distance.

Color plays a crucial role in establishing atmosphere. The deep navy blue of twilight sky provides saturated contrast against the warm artificial lighting of the station. The train’s red running lights introduce an accent of vivid color that punctuates the otherwise neutral palette of whites, grays, and concrete tones. A yellow maintenance box in the lower foreground adds an unexpected chromatic note—industrial, utilitarian, yet compositionally important as a counterweight to the red lights above.

The technical execution demonstrates careful consideration of low-light conditions. The exposure balances multiple light sources: the cool fluorescent platform lighting, the warm glow from the station building visible on the left, and the colored signals of the train itself. The photographer has managed to maintain detail throughout the frame—from the textured concrete of the platform to the lit windows of the distant residential tower—suggesting precise metering and likely the use of a tripod for stability during what was presumably a longer exposure.

What distinguishes this work is its treatment of public space during a quiet moment. The platform is nearly empty; a single figure appears as a small presence near the center, emphasizing scale and the architectural vastness of the station. This human element, though minimal, is essential—it prevents the image from becoming purely abstract geometry and reminds viewers that this is infrastructure designed for movement, for connection, for the daily transit of thousands.

Within the context of Colorado Cityscapes, this photograph documents Denver’s ongoing evolution as a metropolitan center investing in sustainable transit infrastructure. Union Station, a historic landmark renovated in recent years, represents the intersection of preservation and progress. The photographer captures this duality: the contemporary design of the platform canopy suggests forward-looking urban planning, while the fundamental elements—trains, tracks, waiting passengers—evoke the timeless ritual of rail travel.

The use of the Nikon Z5 with ultra-wide glass allows the photographer to emphasize architectural span while maintaining sharpness across the frame. The wide angle compresses multiple planes of depth into a single coherent visual statement, creating an image that functions simultaneously as documentary record and formal composition.

This photograph confirms the photographer’s ability to find visual poetry in utilitarian spaces, demonstrating that the “cityscape” portion of Chapter 3 merits equal attention to Colorado’s celebrated natural landscapes.