by
Fripouille | February 17, 2009 at 09:53 am
702 views | 26 Recommendations |
11 comments
This is what Lyon looks like every year during its annual Light Festival. It's an amazing and unforgettable spectacle, believe me. These nine photos are breathtaking, and you’d have a hard time believing that some of them weren’t photoshopped!. I can assure you that they were not, because I live right where it happens....
The Light Festival (also known as the “Illuminations”) is held every year over four days starting December 8. It’s origins are to be found in the Inauguration of Lyon’s famous statue of the Virgin mary, which overlooks the whole of the city from the top of the cathedral on Fourvière Hill. This happened on December 8 1852, and the event has since become an institution.
The buildings you see here are already beautiful in the daytime, but lit up like this they are absolutely magical.
Downtown is flooded during this period with hundreds of thousands of local people and tourists from all over the world, all public transport is free, and there's a great vibe. It's a bit like a gigantic fairground. Kids, candyfloss, colour and crowds wherever you go, all over the city. Eyes wide open.......full of light and colour.
It changes style every year of course, and the city authorities and event committee invite the best lighting people in the world to contribute. Many of them are French, which is understandable because the French excel at major outdoor event lighting techniques and tableax.
The Light Festival used to last just one evening at first, and the people of Lyon would put up rows of little candles on every home windowsill in the city. They still continue that tradition today, so even in normally nondescript streets it's light light light!
Thousands of tiny little dots of light, flickering bravely and gently in the evening breeze.........
(If you enjoyed these photos, here’s the official site of the event, which contains many more).
Light festival
Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (11)
at 10:06 on February 17th, 2009
Beautiful photos. I've never visited Lyon but I like the fact that these illuminations can help you see the buildings in a whole new (ahem) light.
at 10:23 on February 17th, 2009
:) ! And you know what? Seeing it for real is just mind-blowing! Better than the pics! I like this city..
at 10:15 on February 17th, 2009
The Virgin Mary, the Catholic Church's concession to the Divine Feminine and its Romanization of Isis and Osiris, was one of the most enjoyable parts of being Catholic while I was a boy. The May Procession, held in Her honor, was something really worth doing.
To think that Mary is Mother Earth, and, as seen in Lyon, a version of "Venus on a Half-Shell", is fantastic.
In Milan, the duomo's name is Maria Nascente, "Mary Being Born", a reference to the same Botticelli painting of the original Creatrix story.
at 10:28 on February 17th, 2009
"Mother earth" is my own mother, period, but let's not get semantic here ;)
Yes, the half-shell was well-inspired, I loved it.
You obviously know Italy well....you mention that country frequently. Intriguing.....
Nice to see you here Roy!
at 12:09 on February 17th, 2009
There are some amazing pictures being added to this post!! Wow!!!
Thanks. Super stuff!
at 16:33 on February 17th, 2009
Very nice pictures. Lyon is definitely a place I want to visit.
at 16:58 on February 17th, 2009
Well, if you ever get here, email me. I'll show you around!
at 18:44 on February 17th, 2009
Yes, it is a nice place, although Ive not been during the Light Festival. Thanks for widening this Londoner's horizon!
PS: But don't you have to speak Foreign in Lyon?
at 01:14 on February 18th, 2009
Yes, we speak what is called French here. It's a very agreeable language to speak, but it's hell on earth to write because of all the accents like àèéêï etcetera!
It helps to be able to speak it because if not getting a beer can be difficult!
at 02:33 on February 18th, 2009
Paysage du temps has contributed a photo to this story.
at 02:41 on February 18th, 2009
Je te remercie Paysage! Do you know if this pic was taken downtown (on the Presqu'isle)?