Friday, April 26, 2024

Thousands turn out at Cowboys Stadium for RIT’s 28th Big Shot photograph

Image: espn.go.com

Photography team captures spectacular nighttime image of world’s largest domed stadium

Arlington, Texas – People from across the country and around the world came together at the world’s largest domed stadium Saturday night to help make Rochester Institute of Technology’s 28th Big Shot photograph a success.

More than 2,400 volunteers, including about 40 RIT students who traveled to Texas from upstate New York and 175 alumni who live in the area, provided the primary light source for the Big Shot image while RIT photographers shot an extended exposure with Cowboys Stadium completely dark for the first time in its history.

This year’s final image is a 30-second exposure at f16 at ISO 400.

“The Big Shot represents one of RIT’s signature projects, and we are absolutely thrilled with the outcome of this year’s nighttime photograph of Cowboys Stadium,” says Bill DuBois, professor emeritus in the School of Photographic Arts and Sciences. He led the event with his colleagues Michael Peres, Dawn Tower DuBois and Willie Osterman. DuBois added that capturing the image culminated 20 months of work. “We’d like to thank everyone who came out.”

The Big Shot is often described as “painting with light” because participants are asked to “paint” or shine their light source onto a particular exterior area of a landmark while the photograph is taken. Participants were tasked with continuously painting their assigned area of Cowboys Stadium while RIT photographers – perched atop a scissor lift nearly 40 feet in the air – shot an extended exposure. The photo was taken shortly after sunset Saturday, around 9 p.m. central time.

Since RIT started its Big Shot project in 1987, university photographers have captured such landmarks as The Alamo, San Antonio, Texas; the U.S.S. Intrepid, New York City; and the Royal Palace, Stockholm, Sweden.

Nikon Inc. has been a longtime sponsor of the event and was among the sponsors again this year.

In a new twist for 2013, RIT students and faculty from the Chester F. Carlson Center for Imaging Science created an image of their own in connection with the project by producing a 3D reconstruction of the stadium. The reconstruction will allow viewers to do a virtual walk around the area in which the Big Shot is produced.
“We would also like to congratulate our colleagues from Imaging Science for their three-dimensional reconstruction of the stadium,” says DuBois. “What a night for RIT!”

RIT’s Big Shot event began as a way to teach students about flash photography. RIT’s School of Photographic Arts and Sciences is nationally recognized for its degree programs.

To view the nighttime images of all Big Shot subjects, go to www.rit.edu/bigshot.

Rochester Institute of Technology is internationally recognized for academic leadership in business, computing, engineering, imaging science, liberal arts, sustainability, and fine and applied arts. In addition, the university offers unparalleled support services for deaf and hard-of-hearing students. RIT enrolls nearly 18,000 full- and part-time students in more than 200 career-oriented and professional programs, and its cooperative education program is one of the oldest and largest in the nation.

For more than two decades, U.S. News & World Report has ranked RIT among the nation’s leading comprehensive universities. RIT is featured in The Princeton Review’s 2013 edition of The Best 377 Colleges as well as its Guide to 322 Green Colleges. The Fiske Guide to Colleges 2013 names RIT as a “Best Buy,” and The Chronicle of Higher Education recognizes RIT among the “Great Colleges to Work For 2012.”

To see more of RIT’s rankings and recognition, go to www.rit.edu/overview/rankings-and-recognition.
For RIT news, photos and videos, go to www.rit.edu/news.

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