There are few images as powerful and straightforward as a door. Doors represent change and transition —when one steps across the threshold one has literally moved on from one place to another. This apparently simple purpose of doors has a deeper metaphorical aspect as well: a pauper daily walks by the gates of the palace but they do not open for him; a baby is carried out of the hospital into the world; an inmate is dragged into a prison and is held there by the portcullis. The most dramatic doors are huge operatic gates which represent significant transition. These magnificent structures tend to be found outside palaces, parks, insane asylums, and cemeteries, but sometimes they seem to have no purpose at all…
As we approach Halloween—the one night of the year when the doors between this world and the next are thrown open (well, according to myth anyway), it is appropriate to celebrate the foreboding gates in our world. Below is a gallery of magnificent gates–not all are truly gothic (a few images of non-gothic gates were too good to pass up) but they are all affecting and impressive.
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October 26, 2013 at 3:57 PM
James Bentley
Nice! I was just writing about Gothic Gates in my screenplay. Must be the time of year.
October 26, 2013 at 4:01 PM
Wayne
There better be some sort of horror lurking behind those gates… It’s like Chekhov’s gun.
October 28, 2013 at 7:12 AM
Finn Holding
That’s a fine selection of portals. Loaded with symbolism.
October 30, 2013 at 2:07 PM
Wayne
Thanks, Finn. It’s a little heavy on cemetery gates–but those are the prettiest ones!