Vincent Brady’s inspiration is the stunning beauty of a night sky illuminated by millions of stars, and the photographer’s art has been said to mimic Vincent van Gogh’s impressionist painting, “Starry Night.”
The images that accompany this post are titled “Planetary Panoramas,” captured at various U.S. destinations where the landscape is as spectacular as the sky, and where there is little or no artificial light to spoil the magic.
Landscape Arch, Utah; photo by ©Vincent Brady/Caters News
Brady devised a four-camera rig that utilize fisheye lenses and a 360-degree timelapse technique, during which a single image is produced from 100 to 200 images captured over a period of up to three hours.
Double Arch, Utah; photo by ©Vincent Brady/Caters News
He told Caters News, “My rig has taken me to firefly parties in Missouri, dark eerie nights at Devils Tower, and through Logan Pass at Glacier National Park.
Sleepy Hallow, Michigan; photo by ©Vincent Brady/Caters News
“I’ve been up the mountains of British Columbia and around the amazing arches and sandstone monuments in the Great American Southwest.”
Delicate Arch, Utah; photo by ©Vincent Brady/Caters News
Double Arch, Utah; photo by ©Vincent Brady/Caters News
Brady added that he relies on the earth’s rotation to make his night-sky panoramas come alive, and that this series required working tirelessly “on a number of cold, dark, sleepless nights under awe-inspiring skies.”
For the sake of comparison, below is a photo of Van Gogh’s “Starry Night.”
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