Riverside Museum, Glasgow
The Building
Designed by Zaha Hadid Architects and opened in 2011, this purpose built museum sits at the confluence of the River Kelvin and the Clyde. It is a sectional extrusion open at both ends, its outline encapsulating a wave or pleat, flows from the city to waterfront, symbolizing the dynamic relationship between Glasgow and the ship-building, seafaring and industrial legacy of the river Clyde. Clear glass facades allow light to flood through the main exhibition space. The Riverside Museum won the 2013 European Museum of the Year award.
The Photograph
The regeneration of the docks along the Clyde has resulted in some very impressive architecture, which I have been gradually featuring here on my website. We took the Subway from the city centre to Govan and crossed the Clyde via the newly opened Govan-Partick bridge (which will likely feature here at some point).
The part of the museum facing the Clyde was obscured by building work when we visited, so I made sure that we took the time to view the museum from the opposite side to get this shot.
I made a couple of images shifting the lens between to capture the whole face of the building from a close angle, to emphasise the shapes.
The clean-up in Photoshop was pretty straightforward for this picture as there were very few people around and I timed things to ensure that anyone in the image would be easy to remove.
From there, it was a case of making multiple selections. Initially I started with the main building, the foreground and the sky. I then made selections within the main building to separate the facade, the shaded areas under the facade, the glass frontage and the slabs at the base. I applied various levels and gradients to the different sections to empasise the angles on the facade and to bring the glass frontage to the fore.
Once that was all complete, I made the usual fine tuning "finishing off" touches using the clone tool to remove any blemishes and joins.
See more of my work at my main website.
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