Description
The Arashiyama bamboo grove on the western outskirts of Kyoto is one of Japan’s most iconic natural landscapes — a grove of Mōsō bamboo (Phyllostachys edulis) whose culms reach 15–20 metres in height, their close spacing creating a cathedral-like enclosure. The grove’s photographic quality depends entirely on the exclusion of the 5 million annual visitors who crowd the single path through the bamboo from 9am to 6pm. This photograph required a 4:30am arrival at the grove entrance — before the police and Tourism Authority volunteers restrict access at dawn — to achieve the 30-minute window of empty path and the specific quality of diffused first light that filters through the dense bamboo canopy before direct sun reaches the grove floor. The bamboo culms, in the natural light of dawn, take on a subtle range of green from chartreuse at their tops where light penetrates the canopy to deep forest green in the shadowed sections below. No flash or artificial light was used.
