09 February, 2012

The Great White Silence


Last night I saw a screening of The Great White Silence, Herbert Ponting's 1924 silent film shot on Captain Robert Falcon Scott's second (and last) voyage to Antarctica in 1910-1912. The imagery was hauntingly beautiful and remarkable for its time, and even though I knew what would become of Scott and his expedition, I still found myself hoping for a happy ending. It really has to be one of the most tragic stories: his party made it to the South Pole just 34 days after their Norwegian competitors, and then starved/froze to death on the return not 11 miles from the supplies they needed to survive. The determination and patriotism that comes across in Scott's journal entries- quoted considerably in the title cards- is heartbreaking. I'm really looking forward to seeing some of these journals and documentation in person this summer at the National History Museum in London.



from the exhibition at the national history museum, naturalist dr. wilson's drawings, and shoes worn on the expedition

What is it about arctic exploration that is so fascinating? A while back, I read Anne Fadiman's Ex Libris (a collection of essays about books and reading), and was struck by her collection of books related to this subject. And there is no shortage of iceberg imagery to be found on design blogs these days; I myself have posted many of them, which I've gathered here.



frederick edwin church via ill seen, ill said




from my own collection




best made co, via all the mountains


philipp schaerer, via dear ada


the bs report via bonnie tsang



rojan via 50 watts


francois delfosse via junk culture


shackleton's ship via teenangster


jeremy miranda via the jealous curator

1 comment:

max said...

Oh, neat.