Category Archives: Photographers

The Photograph, Zabriskie Point – Background Story

In response to a post at Jim Goldstein’s site, here is a background story about the photo I posted earlier today – which is part of a series including two other related photographs shown below in this post.

The Photograph, Zabriskie Point

The Photograph, Zabriskie Point. Death Valley National Park, California. April 4, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell. (Sales)

Early this April I spent four days in Death Valley national park, mostly doing landscape photography. In particular I spent a good chunk of time at the Racetrack, shooting sunset, night photos under a full moon, and sunrise. I headed back to the more civilized areas of the valley around Furnace Creek, camping at Texas Springs and visiting all the usual places.

On this morning I joined a number of other photographers on the hill in front of the official overlook at Zabriskie Point, where we awaited the dawn and then the first light on Manley Beacon. As we watched and waited and photographed, it occurred to me that it could be interesting to photograph the photographers – so I moved my tripod back a bit and went at it.

Photographers, Zabriskie Point.

Photographers, Zabriskie Point. Death Valley National Park, California. April 4, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell. (Sales)

This was a completely unanticipated idea – like everyone else, I was mainly there to shoot the more typical landscape photographs like this and this. (More here.) While I did end up with some landscape photos that I like – hard to go wrong at dawn at Zabriskie, right? – the people photos ended up being some of my favorites.

Two Photographers, Zabriskie Point
Two photographers sit behind a camera and tripod at Zabriskie Point, Death Valley National Park

Two Photographers, Zabriskie Point. Death Valley National Park, California. April 4, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell (Sales)

By the way, the group in the first photograph included some quite serious photographers, at least one of whom had been photographing the morning scene with a medium format digital camera. One of the things I like about that photo is, having finished their business, these serious photographers took time out for a fairly standard vacation shot. There are other things I like about this photo as well. Although it is difficult to see in this small web version, I love the three fellows’ upturned faces illuminated in the early morning light. There is something interesting to me about the three of them crowded together as the female group member takes their photograph. Their are some formal/compositional things about it that I like also. I’ll mention one: the arrow shape formed by the light line in the clouds, the striation in the ridge behind them, and the top of the ridge.

Cruelty and Pain, Seen in an Unblinking Lens

New York Times review of the photography of James Nachtwey:

In two new exhibits, photographer James Nachtwey documents the consequences of war and disease. By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN. [NYT > Home Page]

From the article:

Is this how these men would wish to be remembered? Are the pictures an invasion of privacy?

That was the Bush administration’s excuse for prohibiting photographs of returning coffins. But then there’s the argument made at the opening of the show at 401 by a ex-marine who lost his right arm in Iraq. (He was among a number of veterans who stopped by the gallery, a nonprofit space devoted to this sort of exceptional photographic projects, to pay tribute to Mr. Nachtwey.) The marine said he thought these pictures should be on billboards in Times Square so that everybody would know what’s really happening over there, and nobody could miss seeing them.

—–

Flak Photo

Mike Johnston at The Online Photographer calls out the Flak Photo blog:

Flak Photo

is a daily photoblog featuring distinctive photography from an international community of photographers. It aims to promote interesting visual approaches to seeing the world and celebrates the art of exhibiting quality photography on the web. The blog is edited by

Andy Adams

and is published Monday through Friday, using

Expressions. Flak Photo is free of charge and available online 24/7.

Worth a look… though the link isn’t working for me at the moment.

He also has a rant piece about What Photographers Need – with some interesting observations and ideas.

—–