Troy Paiva
A Boeing 727, 737 and MD-80 lay derelict. Scroll through to see more images from Troy Paiva's forthcoming book, "Boneyard: SoCal's Aircraft Graveyards at Night."
Troy Paiva
Paiva's surreal, colorful photos were taken in a variety of locations in California's Mojave Desert, where retired planes languish.
Troy Paiva
Paiva, the son of a flight engineer, grew up in an aviation-obsessed household. This image shows two damaged North American F-86 Sabre Jets.
Troy Paiva
An old movie prop plane lit up in shades of red and purple.
Troy Paiva
Commercial aircraft pictured at an aviation warehouse deep in the Mojave Desert.
Troy Paivas
Paiva, who often shoots at night to avoid desert heat and prying eyes, uses a variety of lighting devices to illuminate his subjects. Here, red, purple and green flashlights combine with the natural light of the moon.
Troy Paiva
This decaying Convair B-58 Hustler in the Mojave is, according to Paiva, the only surviving plane of its kind not currently in a museum. The Hustler was the first bomber capable of supersonic flight, though it was retired in 1970 due to its poor safety record and high operating costs.
Troy Paiva
The exposed innards of a North American B-25 Mitchell.
Troy Paiva
The almost skeletal remains of a Boeing 747 pictured at an aviation warehouse where, between 2006 and 2018, Paiva spent 18 nights taking photographs.
Troy Paiva
Joshua trees peek out behind the rusted frame of a Boeing B-52 Stratofortress. Like many of Paiva's photos, the image explores the interaction between nature and technology.
Troy Paiva
Paiva's book explores how state-of-the art technology turns into ruins. In this image, the front section of a Boeing 737 lies decaying in the desert.
Troy Paiva
While some of Paiva's images are instantly recognizable as planes, others use lighting and careful cropping to distort once-familiar aircraft.
Troy Paiva
Careful cropping and colorful lighting render the graveyards' retired planes as strange but mesmerizing works of art.
Troy Paiva
The remains of a B-52 Stratofortress, a regular part of the US Air Force since 1955. The plane also featured prominently in Stanley Kubrick's 1964 movie "Dr. Strangelove."
Troy Paiva
Paiva often crawls into -- and onto -- planes in order to capture his images, like this shot taken from within a Douglas DC-7.
Troy Paiva
Age and inattention manifest in different ways on the decaying planes -- like the graffiti scribbled on this Lockheed Lodestar.
Troy Paiva
Stark red lighting and jagged metal give a sinister edge to some of Paiva's photos.
Troy Paiva
The still-visible lettering on this B-52 Stratofortress reminds viewers that this decrepit wreckage was once a part of US military operations.
Troy Paiva
An abandoned Piasecki military helicopter from the 1950s.
Troy Paiva
An image from a spot in the Mojave Desert that Paiva dubs "The Secret Boneyard." He keeps the exact location a secret, at the request of the site's owner.
CNN  — 

Photographer Troy Paiva grew up “obsessed” with airplanes. The son of a flight engineer, he spent his childhood engrossed in aviation books and surrounded by model aircraft.

“It’s part of my makeup,” said the 58-year-old during a phone interview from his home in Silicon Valley. “It’s how I was raised.”

Given his similarly longstanding interest in urban exploration and abandoned spaces, it’s little wonder that Paiva wound up at the eerie plane “graveyards” of the Mojave Desert. For more than a decade, he has been visiting the sites, across California, which include a movie prop business and the private boneyard of military airplane collector.

Troy Paiva
The decaying remains of a B-52 Stratofortress.

While he often operates with permission of the owners, the photographer also admits to working in secret – normally under the cover of darkness – to capture the shots.

The resulting images show commercial and military aircraft, from B-52s to Boeing 747s, in varying states of decay. Some have been completely gutted or stripped to reveal electronics and complex engineering. Others still contain interior features familiar to most passengers – padded seats and curtain dividers battered by the desert conditions.

“It’s more interesting if they’re a little bit distressed, and they’re opened up in way you don’t normally see them,” Paiva said. “If you can see parts of airplanes, it’s sometimes more fascinating than seeing them whole.”

Painting with light

Illustrating a dramatic contrast between human progress and the inevitable forces of decline, Paiva has brought together almost 150 of the images into his forthcoming book, “Boneyard: SoCal’s Aircraft Graveyards at Night.” His cinematic photos drip with color, the aircraft’s contours accentuated by fluorescent shades of red, blue, purple, green and yellow.

But while these otherworldly colors may look like the result of clever digital editing, they were in fact achieved using a technique known as “light-painted” photography.

Troy Paiva
An old movie prop plane lit up in shades of red and purple.

Resting his camera on a tripod, Paiva builds the layers of color with strobes, LED flashlights and other hand-held lighting devices. With exposure oftentimes stretching into minutes, rather than seconds, he’s even able to step into the frame to illuminate certain sections of the picture without appearing in the final shot.

It’s a painstaking process that can take anywhere from a couple of minutes to half an hour per image.

“It’s like making a painting,” he said. “You’ve got to craft it – you’ve got to build it. That’s why it’s totally different from other types of photography.”

Fascination with decay

The theatrical images form just a fraction of Paiva’s output from a career spanning almost three decades. The founder of a long-running photography website, Lost America, he has captured not only junkyards, but also abandoned farms, cars, gas stations and amusement parks across the western United States.

Reporting a recent explosion of interest in so-called “ruins photography,” Paiva traces our fascination with decay back through art history.

“This is not a new thing – it’s something that people have always done,” he said. “But I think it’s been popularized in the last 20 years.

Troy Paiva
Paiva uses dramatic lighting to give the planes an otherworldly appearance.

“I think humans are fascinated with their own mortality,” he suggested, by way of explanation, while maintaining that his work is intended to be more “playful” than macabre.

And while Paiva said his work may be read, by some, as a social commentary on American decline, or the nature of the military industrial complex, he is “not trying to make a statement.”

“As an artist, my goal is to put images out there so people can create their own opines and formulate their own feelings about them,” he said, adding: “It’s normal to abandon things – it’s what humans do.”

“Boneyard: SoCal’s Aircraft Graveyards at Night,” published by America Through Time, is available July 29.