Dunes and Desert Mountains. © Copyright 2020 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.
Evening light and shadows on Death Valley dunes and desert mountains.
Much of this day had been spent in locations more off the beaten track than this one, mostly places where I was entirely alone or perhaps only saw another person or two every few hours. Generally speaking, those are the places that most interest me in Death Valley, likely because I have seen and photographed the icons so many times since I began coming here over two decades ago. However, this location is one of the iconic places, one where I thought I might find the interesting light that was in such short supply on this visit! Fortunately I was right — just before sunset the clouds that had blanketed the area all day broke up enough to send some golden hour light across the landscape.
I sometimes write that heading straight to an icon can occasionally be a fine choice. For example, I strongly support first-time visitors going to these places. To borrow the old phrase, “they are icons for a reason,” and when you are new to place they are worth seeing. A second reason that draws me back to photograph an icon is when especially spectacular or unusual conditions arise, and I’m almost always on the lookout for such things. On this trip I realized there can be a reason that I had not thought of — namely that when conditions are not conducive for photography, it may simply be more possible to “make it work” in these places.
G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” is available from Heyday Books and Amazon.
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