charles brooks photographs hidden cavernous interiors of classical musical instruments

charles brooks photographs hidden cavernous interiors of classical musical instruments

art +1.3K shares connections: +580

charles brooks captures ‘architecture in music’

 

Architecture in Music explores the hidden, cavernous interiors and detailed anatomies inside some of the world’s finest musical instruments, captured by photographer Charles Brooks. Using specialist probe lenses and complex imaging techniques, the New Zealand-based photographer unveils the beauty and complexity of unseen spaces inside pianos, violins and flutes, each photo a careful blend of hundreds of frames. The unprecedented sharpness and detail combined with the curious perspectives render these spaces as vast rooms with striking, cavernous interiors, some almost cathedral-like, exposing the tool marks of the makers, repairs carried out through the centuries, and the hidden architecture within.

charles brooks photographs hidden cavernous interiors of classical musical instruments
Charles Theress Double Bass circa 1860 | all images by Charles Brooks

 

 

unveiling cavernous interiors of musical instruments 

 

For his recent series Architecture in Music, Charles Brooks reveals the beauty of the hidden spaces inside classical instruments such as pianos, violins, cellos, saxophones and flutes, the interiors appearing as vast concert halls or contemporary architecture rather than musical components. The photographer captures rare instruments with fascinating histories, including cello once hit by a train, a didgeridoo hollowed out by termites, and an exquisite Fazioli grand piano hand-made from 11,000 individual parts.

 

Using exotic probe lenses and specialist imaging and processing techniques, each instrument is photographed hundreds of times with ever increasing focal lengths. These frames are then carefully blended to form a single striking image. The carefully chosen perspectives and clarity of the images express the illusion of a vast space, tricking the mind into believing the space is much larger than reality. A 240-year-old cello appears like the inside of an ancient ship, a century old saxophone becomes a gaping tunnel of green and gold, while the keys of a piano become a monolithic temple.

charles brooks photographs hidden cavernous interiors of classical musical instruments
CG Conn C-Melody Saxophone 1924

charles brooks photographs hidden cavernous interiors of classical musical instruments
Taylor GS Mini Guitar

charles brooks photographs hidden cavernous interiors of classical musical instruments
Steinway Grand Piano

charles brooks photographs hidden cavernous interiors of classical musical instruments
Fazioli Grand Piano

charles-brooks-photographs-interiors-classical-musical-instruments-designboom-1

Lockey Hill Cello circa 1780

charles brooks photographs hidden cavernous interiors of classical musical instruments
Burkart Elite 14k Gold Flute

architecture in music
Fazioli Grand Piano

charles-brooks-photographs-interiors-classical-musical-instruments-designboom-4

Buffet Prestige Bass Clarinet

architecture in music
Australian Didgeridoo

 

 

1/2
cello once hit by a train
cello once hit by a train
keys of a Steinway Grand Piano
keys of a Steinway Grand Piano

project info:

 

name: Architecture in Music
photographer: Charles Brooks

 

 

designboom has received this project from our ‘DIY submissions’ feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication. see more project submissions from our readers here.

 

edited by: ravail khan | designboom

KEEP UP WITH OUR DAILY AND WEEKLY NEWSLETTERS
suscribe on designboom
- see sample
- see sample
suscribe on designboom

happening this week! holcim, global leader in innovative and sustainable building solutions, enables greener cities, smarter infrastructure and improving living standards around the world. 

PRODUCT LIBRARY

a diverse digital database that acts as a valuable guide in gaining insight and information about a product directly from the manufacturer, and serves as a rich reference point in developing a project or scheme.

X
5