Showing posts with label Galen Rowell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Galen Rowell. Show all posts

Mar 1, 2009

Around Our Planet in 80 ms…




Around the World in 80 Days (80ms)


Michael Todd’s Around the World in 80 Days (1956) was truly an epic… it portrayed David Niven, as Jules Verne’s imperturbable Phineas Fogg, traveling the world in a balloon.  Did you see it…?  Catch the trailer

Nowadays, half a century later, a laptop can take one around the planet to beautiful scenes wherever one's fancy might roam, 24x7… almost instantaneously!  Satellite cafĂ©, VIP airport lounge, fancy yacht in the British Virgin Islands, the Louve, the American Museum of Natural History, or, even just your own backyard! My, how technology has changed…

Digital photographers capture gorgeous scenes, put them on the web, and provide you your own balloon a.k.a. Time Machine.  The nice thing about this new balloon technology; it lets you go where ever you want, whenever you want.  For me, this incredible technical process really stirs my imagination. 
For example, the other morning, waking up to the challenging scent of juniper, I spent an hour in Copenhagen trying to absorb tantalizing photography of Kenny Weng.  Yesterday morning, Michael Frye, who's been documenting winter in Yosemite, captured amazingly colorful poppies along the Merced River.  A month before that, Michael shot the elusive Horsetail Fall, trying to emulate Galen Rowell's incredible shot in Mountain Light.  And, of course, there's William Neill – I particularly like his Half Dome and elm tree, winter, Yosemite National Park, California  1990.  Mind you, that classic image, fĂȘted at the Ansel Adams Gallery Friday, and laboriously captured on film just 20 years ago, was another milestone of this path from Around the World in 80 Days to Around the Planet in 80 ms...
And, mind you, you can create your own Planet; a computer, the Web, a few favorites, a little time, a topic that really captures your fancy, and the never ending spate of new technologies!  For some of you, the name Phineas Fogg may be arcane; the nice thing about this new planet is: you're revitalized, you get to choose your own name, and, clearly, you get to play your own game...

Whether it's art, fine art, landscapes, nature, laptops, technology, blogs, WiFi, iPhone, Kindle 2, or what ever new creation will come about in the next half-century... you have the opportunity to get to know your planet ~ both intimately and rapidly. 
As for me, microphone on my head trying to capture a spate of thoughts, dictate them on a screen in front of me (can you recall when Thomas Jefferson used a quill pen to write the Declaration of Independence on papyrus?), occasionally even around my own images, and share a moment of true rapture ... it seems that so many deeply awesome things come together.
Enjoy...

Aug 14, 2008

Paths of Light


Majestic Blessing Peoples Choice NM State Fair 2007 award winner


Majestic Blessing
©2007, Joe Bridwell, Chopawamsic LC
A slippery race across slick rock to the edge of White Rim Trail Overlook at Canyonlands National Park netted this gorgeous rainbow image.
Sharp edges of White Rim sandstone highlight cliffs formed by the Colorado River.
Nikon D70, 24-120 @ 24, 1/60, f16, ISO 200


Mountain Light, now in 2nd edition, was first published by Galen Rowell in 1986 through Sierra Book Club.
Galen Rowell won the prestigious Ansel Adams Award “For bringing breathtaking images of high and wild places among the world’s mountain ranges to new and growing audiences who thrill at the thought that such unspoiled places still exist and for making them want to help make sure they persist” in 1984.
With his first National Geographic publication about 1972, Rowell would climb the highest mountain in order to get images of breathtaking light in spectacular natural settings.

A quarter of a century later, I became aware of Mountain Light. Beyond the breathtaking images, Galen created a panoply of emotion and technical know-how as he described the history behind each of those hallowed 80 images.
When it was time to summarize my work as a portfolio, although I did not capture them with fore knowledge of Rowell, to my great pleasure, many images were taken in Mountain Light's tradition.

Paths of Light is a portfolio with 19 of nature's images taken between dawn and dusk. Magic Hour, that special time between dawn and dusk, actually provides just the right light for most of these images. We present each image in three parts; conditions of capture (touchy-feely), technical processing (photographers), and the piece de resistance - the image as we remember capturing it (everybody). Many of these images were deemed Worthy of Merit in Single Judge Competitions and State Fair Juried Competitions.

I must say, I've probably read Mountain Light four or five times now. In Paths Of Light, I've tried to incorporate some of the wisdom Galen gained in his many treks. It is my pleasure to provide different ways of seeing light against some of the most majestic landscapes our gorgeous southwest has to offer.

Photographic setting, format, and printing processes are always in debate. The venue: the southwestern United States, the Colorado plateau. The format: raw files and Photoshop development using advanced techniques. The prints: jpegs submitted to blurb.com as 300 dpi images for each appropriate print format size.


We invite you to look at Paths of Light on blurb.com.






Bisti Badlands Cover NM Magazine Jan 2006 award winner


Bisti Badlands
©2004, Joe Bridwell, Chopawamsic LC
Lying on my side one mid day in the Bisti, northwestern New Mexico, I captured the sharp overhang of this hoodoo framing red dog hills against an autumn sky.
Imagine my surprise when it received the first award from my photography…
Nikon CoolPix 5700, 12.7 mm, 1/380, f7.6, ISO 100



Front Cover: Majestic Blessing, People’s Choice, Adult Amateur, New Mexico State Fair, 2007
Back Cover: Bisti Badlands, Cover, New Mexico Magazine, Jan., 2006