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A Little Bit of News

Lots of things have been happening, and you finally get to read about them! Time for some bullet points.

  • I pre-ordered Galen Rowell’s Inner Game of Outdoor Photography a few months ago, and was surprised (and happy!) when it came in last week. I’ve read the preface and the intro, and I can already say that a very favorable review will be coming when I finish it.
  • Last week was the second First Thursday Fayetteville of the season, and I had a pretty successful evening. Looks like I’m finally making a name for myself!
  • Tonight is Art Amiss 12! Art Amiss is an organization for artists in and from Arkansas, and they have a biannual juried art exhibition at the Dickson Street Theater in Fayetteville. I’ve shown at Art Amiss 7,8, 11, and I’ll be at 12!  (You can’t show at more than two consecutive shows, and I was out of the country for 9 and 10 :) ). The event will be tonight from 7 until around midnight, and there will be a fashion show, short films, live music, and plenty of art to peruse. Also a bar. Come!
  • On another note, I’ve (almost) graduated! I finished all of my classes this semester, and all I have to do is write my honors thesis and defend it this summer. Then I will FINALLY be done with my undergraduate career. It feels good.
  • Oh, and one more thing–I’m officially engaged, and I may be moving to Richmond, Virginia, sometime later this year! I’ll keep you posted on both of those things, but feel free to ask if you’d like more details.
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RARE Review, or, My Plea to Joel Sartore

All images © Joel Sartore.


When I heard about Joel Sartore’s new book, I thought it was a really interesting project.

When I saw this promo video for Joel Sartore’s new book, I thought “this is exactly what I want to do with my life. Period.”

When I ordered Joel Sartore’s new book, I couldn’t wait for it to come in.

When I first read Joel Sartore’s new book, I could not help but have that feeling you get when you watch a heart-wrenching scene in a movie and you do everything you can to hold back one of those big, hot tears that blurs your vision before it finally gets sucked back in.

I’m not kidding.

Entitled RARE: Portraits of America’s Endangered Species, this is more than just another picture coffee table book. It is a passionate plea to you, me, and the rest of the world to learn to remember our love of nature and to step up and do something about the species we are losing each an every year to extinction.

The project is fairly simple in concept, rather difficult in process, and absolutely beautiful in execution. The book features stunning images of America’s endangered species, both small and large, famous and unheard of. They are all on simple black or white backgrounds and, in this way, are given equal “screen time.” Sartore traveled to zoos around the country and worked with biologists to capture the emotions of these dying creatures–both plants and animals–and the results are phenomenal. Am I praising it too much? Impossible.

The layout of the book is simple and well-designed. The fonts and colors compliment the images well, and though priority is given to the images themselves, the text accompanying them is educational, heart-warming, and tear-jerking. Though you won’t remember the numbers, names, or locations of most of the animals (and plants!) in this book, you will come away with a newfound respect for them and ones like them.

The foreword by Sartore opens the book with a narrative about the photo session for Bryn the rabbit, one of the last two (elderly female) members of her species, both of whom died a few months later.

Our photo session was one of the last chances Bryn had to be noticed…the Columbia Basin pygmy rabbit is now extinct, a passenger pigeon for the 21st century. To see the last of any species in a glass jar of museum preservative is an absolute outrage to me. To know that it will happen again is truly heartbreaking.

Yet while he is quite stern about how the extinction of our flora and fauna is mostly our own faults (which is quite true), he is encouraging as well.

Wouldn’t it be great to begin a national dialogue now about the importance of saving the wild places that remain and the species that live there? To do this, nature must become more than just a faint notion to the masses, something that we like in the abstract but consider irrelevant to our daily lives.

If that doesn’t scream “integrity” to you, I don’t know what would. Blending humor with knowledge and, of course, passion, Sartore is truly a voice for those species who are under constant threat of destruction.

California Condor

The introduction, by Verlyn Klinkenborg, is also moving. He gives a short yet informational (and easy to read) summary of the history and effectiveness of the Endangered Species Act–and discusses why it needs help and why it’s not enough. And he makes another important point: many people have never heard of, much less seen, these endangered creatures. Yes, they’ve seen polar bears. But have they seen the Higgins eye mussel? The Salt Creek tiger beetle? The Delhi Sands fly? No. And they wont care about them unless they feel a connection to them. And that, my friends, is precisely where Joel Sartore’s images come into play.

Being a biology major, I also enjoyed the fact that the scientific names of all of the species was included. Just thought I’d mention that. Joel has obviously done his research and knew his subjects well-enough to capture more than just an image–he captured their emotions.

The images are striking because they are so simple yet so powerful, and the animals are portrayed in very unique and new ways. His image of a bald eagle, for example, shows the back of the head rather than the eyes and beak. This is an image (along with many others) that we do not see every day. When I saw this one, I realized I’d never seen the back of an eagle’s head.

His image of a polar bear is not of the stereotypical pure white bear walking along an ice sheet with its cubs. It is of a dirty, grimy bear with foam at its mouth on a black background. Sartore obviously wanted to show these creatures in a new way in order to make people care. He wanted to make sure he showed the sides of these creatures that have never been seen by the majority of America. Maybe he was even betting on it.

This book is worth the money ($16 on Amazon, $24 on Sartore’s website (though I’ve read that these may come signed), and I contend that it is an essential buy if you are into nature, photography, animals, coffee-table books, or any combination thereof. My only criticism is that I wish it were larger.

 

Ocelot (Leopardis pardalis), a secretive species that is down to just a handful in the United States. Its population in Central and South American remains unknown.

We must realize there is more to life than the price at the pump and what’s on TV. Indeed, there’s nothing more important than what’s going on with the rest of creation. Healthy forests, marshes, and prairies keep our air and water clean. So when we save biodiversity, we’re actually saving ourselves. Now that’s something even a St. Andrew beach mouse could get excited about.

I’ve never been more attached to the purpose and images in a photography book than I am about this one. If you want to borrow mine, let me know. Buy it. Ask your library to carry it.

Most importantly, share it. That’s the only way these images are going to change anything. People have to see them. People have to love them. People have to remember them.

______________________________________________________________________________________

That’s my review. Now here is my plea.

I hate you, Joel Sartore. I hate you because you have done what I have been wanting to do for years–most of my mature life–and you have done it so well that I may never get a chance to do it in such an impressive, unique, and groundbreaking way to truly make a difference in this world. (OK, I don’t really hate you.)

Yet I also love you. I love you because you are so incredibly dedicated to your work and you have done something selfless that will not just promote yourself, but will aid in the conservation of endangered species both in the United States and worldwide. You have taken a courageous stand for the preservation of biodiversity when the economy, energy, and much of America (the uneducated parts, at least) is against you.

That being said, Joel, if you’re out there and you feel like lending a helping hand, please feel free to do so. You know what I want to do with my career, because I want to do exactly what you’re doing. If you know people who could help me out, that would be great. If you want to critique my photos, go for it. I hadn’t realized what I wanted to do with my photography until I read this book, and now I am 100% sure. So, thank you for that. And thank you for whatever opportunities you may throw my way, be it on purpose or accidentally.

OK, so I don’t really hate you.

UPDATE: RARE now has its own website. Check it out.

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Inaugural Book Review: Scott Kelby’s “The Digital Photography Book, Volume 1″

For Christmas this year, I got about a million photo books. This has prompted me to start doing mini-reviews. Hope you like them.

I finished Scott Kelby’s The Digital Photography Book, Volume 1 in a few days, though it could easily be finished in one if you don’t have much to do. The reason this was such a quick read was two-fold: I knew most (but not all) of what was in it, and each page covers a different topic–a blurb about this, a blurb about that, and so on. It’s easy to read a few pages, set it down, and pick it up later without having to remember where you left off. The book doesn’t go into too much detail in any one area, but the details that are included are valuable. To the seasoned photographer, it’s a quick review (f/11 is a sweet spot for group portraits, and be sure to check the “blinkies”), while for the novice the tips may be overwhelming the first time through–but quite useful on the second.

The book is divided into eleven chapters, with almost every one having “pro” in the title: Shooting Sports Like a Pro, Shooting People Like a Pro, Taking Travel & City Life Shots Like a Pro, Shooting Lanscapes Like a Pro, etc. Kelby, through his short tips and sometimes overly-witty humor, tries to bring home that everyone can be a professional photographer (note the “Great for point-and-shoot digital camera owners, too!” quip on the cover) if they begin to think like one–and follow his advice. The subtitle on the cover, in fact, states that the book is full of “step-by-step secrets for how to make your photos lok like the pros’!” This says who he’s aiming towards: amateurs, advanced-amateurs, and maybe even pros who want a quick skim and a few refreshers.

Kelby covers the importance of sharpness, where to aim during formal portraits, tips for shooting in forests, tips for shooting on an incline, and even why sports photographers better have a pile of gold laying around. Some pages might teach you something new, and some may not (do any of us need to be reminded about carrying around extra memory cards?). But some pages featured ideas I’d never considered, such as comparing the LCD on your camera with you computer screen to see how different the colors/brightness look, and adjusting your field practices to those differences. His biggest, and probably most important tip: when you have the time, take the time. Get it right the first time, so you have less to do in the (digital) darkroom later.

Kelby explains the basics fairly well, though he expects you to know what “aperture” means, at least a little bit. That sentence alone should be able to tell you if you need to read this book. If you are new to photography, you’ll get a lot out of it, which I think is his goal–he’s not catering to the pros, though they might pick up a few tips here and there.

He caters to Nikon and Canon owners, as those are the two most widely accepted and used DSLR brands, but his tips are useful on any make or model–you might just have to search for the settings on your own more often. (And he even lets you take a peek at his gear–Nikon guy all the way. One for the home team.)

Overall, for $15, if you’re just getting interested in photography, it’s worth a look. If you shoot for a living, and are actually making a good living, it’s probably not worth your time. Once you read this, you’ll probably have a better idea of how your skills stack up against the pros. If you already know most of it, you’re pretty much set. If you don’t, you’ve got some work to do. I guess I’m in-between.

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