Windows XP Background, Bliss. Photo by Charles O'Rear |
Napa
Valley spent most of the 1990s trying desperately to curb the spread of
phylloxera, a microscopic pest that was devastating its grapes. By the time the
epidemic had run its course in 1999, some 50,000 acres of fields had been decimated.
Although
the cost for growers was astronomical—half a billion dollars in total—the
landscape of Northern California had never looked more idyllic. Endless rows of
grapevines had been replaced by a lush carpet of grass, dotted here and there
with wildflowers.
It
was this vision of Sonoma County that flashed by Charles O’Rear’s car window as
he drove down Highway 121 in 1998. Although he was a professional photographer,
with work featured in National Geographic and the Los Angeles Times, O’Rear
wasn’t on assignment that Friday afternoon. Instead, he was headed to visit his
then-girlfriend (now-wife) near San Francisco.
But
he still had one eye on the region’s rolling hills. It was January, and after
the winter rains, “the grasses turn green and I know the chances of finding
these beautiful hillsides are really good,” he recalled. “I’m going to be more
prepared. I’m going to be more alert.”
And
then, he saw it. “My God!” he thought. “The grass is perfect! It’s green! The
sun is out, there’s some clouds.’”
So
he stopped his car, pulled out his medium-format camera, and took a few photos
using color Fujifilm. Those brilliant greens and pure blues were totally
unedited when O’Rear uploaded them to Corbis, a stock photo and image licensing
site founded by Bill Gates. A few years later, he got a call from Microsoft
asking to use his shot of Sonoma County as the default background for its
newest operating system.
The
company never told O’Rear exactly why they selected his photograph. “Were they
looking for an image that was peaceful?” he mused. “Were they looking for an
image that had no tension?” But the artist duoGoldin+Senneby , who spent months
researching the photograph for a 2006 work, said that the Microsoft branding
team “wanted an image with ‘more grounding’ than the images of skies they had
used in Windows 95. Also, the green grass and the blue sky fit perfectly with
the two main colors in the branding scheme.”
O’Rear
agreed to sell Microsoft all the rights to his photograph. But when he tried to
mail them the negatives, FedEx balked. Microsoft had valued the image so highly
that none of the shipping companies could cover the insurance. In the end,
O’Rear hopped on a plane to the company’s Seattle headquarters to hand-deliver
the photograph.
Although
he signed a non-disclosure agreement that prevents him from revealing the exact
price, O’Rear has claimed it was the most he’s ever been paid for an image—and
the second-largest sum received by a living photographer for a single
photograph, topped only by an image of Bill Clinton hugging Monica Lewinsky.
Microsoft
dubbed it Bliss, and, since Windows XP was released in 2001, it’s been seen by
at least a billion people. “We became interested in this hill as a backdrop to
our lives in front of the screen, as a kind of collective subconscious,” said
Goldin+Senneby. The pair visited the site with O’Rear, recreating the iconic
background as part of their work After Microsoft (2006–07).
“We
were thinking about it a lot in relation to 19th-century landscape painting,
which had been so formative in producing imaginations of the nation-state. What
kind of imaginary was this globalized landscape producing?” they wondered. “If
this was the image of ‘the global landscape,’ where was it?”
People
have guessed anywhere from France to Ireland to New Zealand. O’Rear remembers
getting a call from the engineering department at Microsoft, asking him to
settle a bet. Several employees were certain that Bliss had been taken in
Washington, near Seattle—and that the image was Photoshopped. It wasn’t
(although Microsoft later admitted to enhancing the green and cropping the
image).
Since
1998, the hill has been re-planted—Goldin+Senneby’s photograph of it, taken
almost a decade later, features rows of grapevines and a gray, cloudy sky.
“It’s
interesting that people still remember the image,” Goldin+Senneby said. “The
whole idea of having one standardized image for every desktop on more or less
every computer in the world seems so old-fashioned today. It’s from a time
before the social web and its algorithmic mass-customization.”
But
even today, two years after Microsoft phased out the system, seven percent of
computers worldwide still run on XP. O’Rear said he has seen his image
everywhere from the White House situation room to a North Korean power plant.
“Anywhere
on this planet right now, if you stop somebody on the street and you show
somebody that photograph, they’re going to say ‘I’ve seen that somewhere, I
recognize that,’” he said. “I think it’s going to be around forever.”
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