Digital Assets

Rome Colosseum — Sunrise Pink Light

190.96 

The Colosseum in Rome photographed at sunrise from Via Sacra — the 2,000-year-old amphitheatre in the first rose-pink morning light, the Via Sacra paving stones in the foreground, the Arch of Constantine visible to the right.

Description

The Colosseum — Amphitheatrum Flavium — was constructed between 70 and 80 CE under the Flavian emperors and could accommodate 50,000–80,000 spectators in its tiered seating. The building’s exterior — three tiers of arched openings framed by engaged columns in the Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian orders — represents the most complete surviving example of Roman monumental civic architecture. The pre-dawn photography challenge at the Colosseum — achieving an empty foreground in one of Rome’s most visited public spaces — requires arrival before 5:30am in summer and before 6:30am in winter. This photograph was made at 5:45am in late September, from a position on the Via Sacra looking toward the building’s north face, at the moment when the first horizontal rays of the rising sun struck the Travertine limestone of the upper arcade while the lower levels remained in shadow. The warm rose quality of early dawn light on the Travertine is among European architecture’s most classically beautiful photographic conditions.

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