Pivot

[Image: From "Cropped" by Gerco de Ruijter; view larger].

The images of "Grid Corrections" seen in the previous post reminded me of an earlier project, also by photographer Gerco de Ruijter, called "Cropped," previously seen here back in 2012.

[Image: From "Cropped" by Gerco de Ruijter; view larger].

The images seen here are all satellite views of pivot irrigation systems, taken from Google Earth and cleaned up by de Ruijter for display and printing.

[Images: From "Cropped" by Gerco de Ruijter; view larger].

The resulting textures look like terrestrial LPs disintegrating into the landscape, or vast alien engravings slowly being consumed by sand—

[Image: From "Cropped" by Gerco de Ruijter; view larger].

—and they are, at times, frankly so beautiful it's almost hard to believe these landscapes were not deliberately created for their aesthetic effects.

[Image: From "Cropped" by Gerco de Ruijter; view larger].

Granted, de Ruijter has color-corrected these satellite shots and pushed the saturation, but as potential gardens of pure color and hue, the original pivotscapes are themselves already quite extraordinary.

[Image: From "Cropped" by Gerco de Ruijter; view larger].

For a few more examples of these—posted at a much-larger, eye-popping size—click through to the Washington Post or consider watching the original film, called "Crops," here on BLDGBLOG.

[Images: From "Cropped" by Gerco de Ruijter; view larger].

[Previously: Grid Corrections].

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