The Polonium and the
Radium Connection
The picture of Marie Skłodowska Curie's
statue in the old town of Warsaw is probably the picture I'm the most proud
of in my whole career. First off, Maria Sklodowka Curie is not only one
of the most recognized heroes of Poland but in human history. She is one
of my personal heroes. For those who don't know Maria Sklodowka Curie was
a good friend of Albert Einstein. She discovered two elements: polonium
and radium, and is the only person in history to have been awarded two
Nobel prizes in two different disciplines: physics and chemistry. And no,
she is not French! She is Polish but was married to Pierre Curie, a French
scientist.
Her statue in Warsaw shows her holding
a polonium molecule. When I first saw the statue, I said: "But wait, the
radium is missing!". I was obsessed with the idea of adding the radium
molecule and this when I thought: "The sun is radiating light so it will
be the radium molecule! " Now that I had the idea nailed down, I had to
figure out how I was going to do that. I knew that the sun rises East and
the statue is facing East so the biggest problem of the puzzle was solved.
The next problem was to align the sun with the statue. I use this fantastic
tool called The photographer's
Ephemeris to know exactly when and where the sun and the moon rise
and set. Nothing is left to chance. Based on my calculations, I had to
wait 4 months for the sun to be at the right position. When the time came,
I only had a window of 1-week or so to take that picture.
When the day was nearing, I was nervously
checking the weather forecast. It always help to have a little luck on
your side ;) I was lucky enough to have almost no cloud on that particular
day.
On a technical standpoint, I had
to figure out where to stand and what focal length to use in order to have
the sun the same size as the polonium molecule. After a few tries, I got
everything right and away I went shooting like crazy. I have never so nervous
as a photographer because I knew I couldn't screw up and let that special
moment get away. I only had around 15 minutes to take the picture I wanted
because as the sun goes up, it becomes brighter and brighter and it loses
its well-defined clean sphere shape.
My first idea was to put the sun
right behind the polonium molecule to create like an explosion. Here is
the shot of my initial idea.
Although it's really cool, I wanted
to show the radium molecule so it meant showing the Sun. That's why that
shot didn't make the cut.
I had other technical challenges
in shooting the statue but those challenges are part of the behind-the-scene
unrevealed secrets ;) If you go on site, you'll quickly see why this isn't
an easy picture to take. There you have it.
Marc-Olivier Giguere
Marc-Olivier Giguere is a designer
and a professional photographer specialized in artistic and architecture
photography. He used to live in England and in Poland, and had a few exhibitions
in Warsaw and was published in a few Polish art magazines. More than 30
of his photos, printed on paper and aluminium, are exhibited at the Consulate
of the Republic of Poland in Montreal. Marc-Olivier is very proud to show
Poland in a very artistic way. You can find more of his work at: www.mogiguere.com
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