Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

Sunday, December 22, 2013

A Year in Photographs

JANUARY brought an opportunity to share the winter beauty of Yosemite Valley with my whole family...



FEBRUARY provided moments to appreciate the coziness of a warm house on a cold day...



MARCH saw some much needed rain and a profusion of flowers...



APRIL was full of visits with family and friends in both Yosemite and Indiana...



MAY allowed time to reflect on the past and ponder my path into the future...



JUNE foreshadowed the forest fires and home repair projects that would persist throughout our summer and fall...



JULY offered an escape from the intense California heat to the cool shores of Lake Superior and a chance to hang out with my sister and nephew in Minnesota...



AUGUST afforded us a break from home renovating to explore the Monterey coast and Sierra Nevada high country...



SEPTEMBER was full of fun times with good friends in the Tetons and Oakland...



OCTOBER was a challenging time of transition and loss for loved ones back home in Indiana...



NOVEMBER made me grateful for unexpected moments of beauty and relaxing family vacations...



And DECEMBER has been filled with winter wonders...



Happy holidays to all and best wishes for the coming new year!

Monday, July 2, 2012

Seeing the World in a New Light


I am obsessed with light. It started in college when I took an art appreciation class and learned about the Impressionist movement. The idea that a painter could paint not an object or scene, but rather the reflections of light, created a whole new way of seeing. Static objects within the landscape became dynamic as my awareness of sun-shifted shadows and highlights intensified their textures and colors. Sunlight unlocks the door to an infinitely more beautiful world.

Around this same time period I began pursuing photography as a hobby, learning to consider light as I composed my shots. I’m not a very technical photographer, partly because I don’t have the patience to learn about and practice the exacting art of manual focus and light control, but digital photography has allowed me to experiment and develop my creativity. To compensate for the restrictions of a point and shoot camera, I began playing with sunlight by filtering or blocking it with objects in the shot to control any resulting lense flares. I remember the first time I raised my camera up to the petals of a back-lit flower to take an extreme close-up while on a hike in the Tetons. The resulting photo gave me a miraculous new appreciation for the natural world.

As we meet our own needs for hunger and thirst throughout the day, it’s easy to forget that the plants and trees around us are constantly taking in nourishment as well. We gardeners know it more than most, especially out west, but even then how often do we really take the time to appreciate the systems that give life to the plant? I’m not a biologist by training, so it took me completely by surprise that night when I got home from hiking and looked at my photo on the computer. The sunlight had highlighted an intricate tracing of veins across the surface of that deep purple larkspur petal, and refracted to reveal a sparkling translucence that literally took my breath away. There are few things more beautiful in this world than a flower bathed in sunlight...









Ever since that day, I’ve been obsessed with documenting the delicate inner workings of leaves and flowers through my photographs. One of my favorite places to be is under a deciduous tree at midday when the sunlight is streaming down, illuminating the canopy of leaves above me. There is a quality to that vivid saturation of colorful light, which makes me feel intensely alive and keenly aware of the life pulsating around me. My body and the tree, we both absorb this invisible bombardment of photons and turn it into physical nourishment. We both move fluid through our veins as a means of surviving and thriving. We breathe in symbiotic partnership, each sustaining the other. In this moment I am reminded that it's not so much a matter of reconnecting with nature as it is simply removing the layers that insulate us from each other. The connection itself is impossible to sever...





  

This luminous way of seeing requires only a simple shift of perspective for wondrous details to instantly emerge. All you have to do is let your eyes be guided by the light... 




Thursday, May 31, 2012

Bud, Flower, Fruit and Seed


Peter and I went to Merced Canyon earlier this month with the intention of viewing the peak wildflower season on the Hite Cove Trail. Shortly into our hike, however, we discovered that we were too late to catch the landscape at its most lush and colorful. Instead, we found ourselves walking through an ecosystem in flux - not quite blooming flowers were intermixed with those that had already spent their petals and moved along to further stages of reproduction. This fact gave me pause and emphasized the reality of the scene I had been seeking. These intricate artistic forms evolved for function alone thus relegating human appreciation to an afterthought from the flower's perspective. 

Fully feeling my insignificance, I was humbled to witness the miracles taking place all around me. I found myself transfixed by each plant, noticing the unique manifestations of bud, flower, fruit and seed...

California buckeye buds
Mariposa lily

Redbud pods
Fringe pod plant

Mountain dandelion seeds

Some of the most interesting plants to me were those that displayed multiple phases simultaneously. How the small smooth buds of individual flowers grew and changed shape as the petals began to split and open, revealing an often elaborate inner architecture...


Twining snake lily

Prettyfaces

Blazing star

Another plant displayed the transition from flower to fruit, demonstrating how its gently curved petals withered and dropped with little fanfare once the larger green seed-filled fruits took shape...

White globe lily

Globe lily fruit
Striking though a field of flowers in full bloom may be, I see now that the true beauty is in the process revealed through careful observation. The gradation of pale pink to spring green along the winged edge of a globe lily fruit, gossamer tassels attached by impossibly thin stalks to the dart tipped dandelion seeds, sunlight shining through the elaborately painted petals of a Mariposa lily. With a little attention to detail the functional becomes magical.  

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

For the Love of Trees

Do you have a favorite time of year when you find the trees especially beautiful? Myself, I can't decide between the delicate blooms and translucent greens of spring, leafy cool shade during the summer, vibrantly colored canopies in the fall, and the structurally striking bare months of winter. As I learn to navigate the world more frequently with all five senses engaged, I continue to be in awe of the diversity of trees that surround me everywhere I go. How blessed we are to have such beauty in our lives...

On this perfect June day in the Sierra Nevada, the vanilla spiced air is filled with steady birdsong and a tinge of coolness from the occasional breeze. Standing on the gently sloping forest floor at its base, I crane my neck to gaze up the trunk of a Sequoia tree. I feel the soft and spongy thickness of its bark under my fingertips and hear the hollow sounding thunk as I pat it firmly with my open palm. The resulting cloud of stirred dust hangs suspended in a shaft of sunlight that streams through the canopy.

Giant Sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum) in Sequoia National Park

The crisp clatter of dancing cottonwood leaves sprinkles down from above as strong sunshine strikes the drying grass. The earthy sweet scent of freshly fallen leaves wafts up from the warm ground as I lie on my back on the picnic table looking into the cerulean sky. This beauty astounds me to the point where everything else is stripped away - thoughts, words, memories, ideas - and I am left with only an awareness that I am alive on this glorious day and that there is nothing more in the world I could want or need than this moment.

Eastern cottonwood (Populus deltoides) at Rattlesnake Springs

Long thin shadows stretch across the wind-blown snow as the last few hours of winter sunlight linger on the horizon. The interlaced silhouette of trunks and branches filters out almost all perceptible traces of warmth. A sense of cold, hard stillness and of life delayed makes everything feel sharper - the brittle vegetation, the powdery air, and the angular bareness of the trees, which will be lush with life and color in just a few months. For now the landscape sleeps with only the tracks of hardy mammals and the ripples of wind skimming across its surface.  

Mixed forest of deciduous trees at Minnesota Valley National Wildlife Refuge

Morning sunlight is just starting to creep over the tops of the rocks in Hidden Valley spreading a warm glow over the twisted shape of a dead juniper tree. Reincarnated as a home for cavity nesting birds, food for insects, and lookout for aerial hunters, this tree will live on in its new form until gravity moves it into the next phase of rebirth. I admire its unintentional beauty and sculptural grace, hard pressed to fathom how any human artist could perfect upon this natural form.

Single-leaf pinyon pine (Pinus monophylla) Joshua Tree National Park

The rain filters down through the canopy in a fine mist as I climb up the path from the stream bed below. Towering in front of me is an architectural mass of columns and buttresses simultaneously sinking down into the earth and arching overhead. The energy present in this rainforest is palpable. Plants are rooting, clinging, inching and unfurling in every direction, crowding the edges of the paved trail with anticipation. The strangler fig, in particular, has perfected the art of thriving in a highly competitive environment - it attaches to a host tree for support and eventually surrounds and absorbs it. In this place it is not so easy to forget that life and death are two sides of the same coin.

Strangler fig, 'Akaka Falls State Park


"Each moment of the year has its own beauty, a picture which was never before and shall never be seen again." 
- Ralph Waldo Emerson

Coastal live oaks, East Bay area regional park

Almond orchard, Highway 198 near Lemoore, California

Waihou Springs Trail, above Makawao on Maui

Aspen (Populus tremuloides), Mineral King District of Sequoia National Park

Palm tree, Hawaii Tropical Botanical Garden near Hilo, Hawai'i

Ingrid and Steven's tree, Burnsville, Minnesota

Interior live oak (Quercus wislizeni), Sequoia National Park

Oak tree in snow, Sequoia National Park

Deciduous forest, Alden, Minnesota

Western white pine (Pinus monticola), Tioga Pass in Yosemite National Park