I returned to the Tian Yuan Wuji Temple as one returns to a familiar refrain—recognisable, yet never quite the same. Last year, I had framed it in measured lines and careful symmetry; this time, I came armed with an ultra-wide lens, hoping to bend its vast geometry into something both intimate and grand. The temple resisted at first. Its circular tiers—five rising rings crowned in vermilion and gold—seemed to slip away from perfect alignment, as though symmetry here was never meant to be absolute, only suggested.
Built in the late twentieth century, the temple is a relatively modern devotion, yet it draws deeply from ancient Taoism cosmology. Each level represents a layer of the heavens, a symbolic ascent toward the boundless—wuji, the infinite void before form and division. Standing before it, one feels less like an observer and more like a participant in that quiet metaphysical order, where circles echo eternity and repetition becomes reverence.
But translating that sensation into an image proved far less serene. The ultra-wide lens exaggerated every imperfection; lines bowed, edges stretched, and the near-symmetry became a delicate negotiation rather than a certainty. Light, too, was uncooperative. The temple’s glossy surfaces caught and scattered the sun in sharp bursts, turning glare into an adversary that could not be easily subdued. Frame after frame failed—too harsh, too distorted, too restless.
And yet, persistence has its own rhythm. In the end, this image—imperfect, slightly askew—felt truer to the place than any rigid symmetry could have been. The temple does not demand perfection; it invites approximation, an acceptance of imbalance within harmony. Through the lens, I realised that perhaps the goal was never to conquer the structure, but to listen to it—to let its quiet philosophy guide the frame, even if the lines never quite meet.
Sony A7RV
Laowa 9mm f5.6
Linking Sunday Best

A beautiful upward picture
ReplyDeletePractice with 9mm ultrawide
DeleteFrom this perspective "A Stairway to Heaven" is what comes first to mind for me! ;)
ReplyDeleteA very stunning photo.
ReplyDeleteA most impressive temple, and it has survived many centuries. Impressive photo, but my first reaction is that it a step aerobic workout to get to this temple. Hard to believe that long flight of stairs. This is not a place for the elderly or lame.
ReplyDeletePlenty of steps around the place for a good work out
Delete...I love your "stairway to heaven" shot!
ReplyDeletewow, your persistence really paid off. the shot looks like it is pointing straight to Heaven. And it also shows the height and many steps to get there, which seems symbolic of life to me.
ReplyDeleteThank you Ginny
DeleteMe parece una foto de una buena calidad, claro que no siempre encontramos lo que queremos captar.
ReplyDeleteSaludos.
Al final conseguiste una gran fotografia del templo a pesar del gran angular.
ReplyDeleteUn estupendo punto de fuga con este contra picado genial.
ReplyDeleteAbrazo
Beautiful scene, sky and photo! Have a wonderful weekend.
ReplyDeleteWhat was on that special site, before the Temple was built in the late 20th century?
ReplyDeleteIt was just wilderness with a lot of snakes
DeleteClimbing the steps is punishment for the sins you've committed since your last visit.
ReplyDeleteThat photo is great and of course the subject too.
ReplyDeleteGenerally I'm not a fan of ultra-wide lenses, but this is an absolutely perfect use of one!! Well done!
ReplyDeleteThat is the perfect photo :-D
ReplyDeleteBeautiful shot.
ReplyDeleteThat is a stunning shot.
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
Fantastisc perspective... thank you for sharing at MosaicMonday
ReplyDelete