Difference of opinion

mel·an·cho·li·a

ˌmelənˈkōlēə/

noun

deep sadness or gloom; melancholy.

This is a pretty standard definition of melancholia.  I'm not sure I agree.  I have heard many people describe my photographs as having an air of melancholy to them.  That pleases me because that is what I feel when I am shooting.  I want to capture a depth to places and scenes that is perhaps missed by the causal observer.  The photographs have to have weight and emotion.  They must touch a chord with the viewer.  I want them to leave an imprint rather than be transitory. 

tran·si·to·ry

ˈtransəˌtôrē,ˈtranzəˌtôrē/

adjective

not permanent.

Maybe I am lost in my words.  I listen to music that could not be described as happy, or shiny, but could certainly be described as beautiful.  Ludovico Einaudi for example - I would say there is an air of melancholy to his music.  It is perhaps hauntingly beautiful.  That could be description I am looking for but I am searching for one word to sum this feeling up.  The closest that my vocabulary takes me is melancholia.

It would seem therefore that I have a difference of opinion.  With whom I'm not sure.  There may be some wisdom out there that can enlighten me and provide me with the word that I need to fill this lexical void.  If I was less bothered about the word (and about sounding pretentious), I'm sure I would settle with a description of my photographs as 'beautiful'.

beau·ti·ful

ˈbyo͞odəfəl/

adjective

pleasing the senses or mind aesthetically.