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| Art Imitates Art
By Beth Luce
The book, Edge of the Earth, Corner of the Sky which takes its name from an ancient Greek phrase coined when the world was thought to be flat was meticulously shot in desert, forest, mountain, ocean and polar sites over nine years, its photos precisely paired according to color, subject, texture and format. Due out this September, the exactingly produced, 240-page book will be Wolfes 54th, and the third from his publishing arm, Wildlands Press. Almost every book Wolfe has published in the past eight years has taken strong positions on environmental issues. Its no longer enough, in my own mind, to simply do a pretty book, Wolfe says on a rare day when hes in his First Avenue studio in Seattle. We want to do a bigger book than a publisher would normally do. We can produce a much grander, highbrow book that also helps the health of the planet. Edge of the Earth, he explains, asks the question, What if we wound up only having wild areas parceled into small regions? The thought came to him one day as he was flying into Seattle over Mount Rainier. He looked down at the crisp, square-shaped boundaries of the national park, noting its postage-stamp impression, with the surrounding areas logged right up to its edges. Just because these places are remote doesnt mean theyre protected, he says. Weve got to make a much greater effort on the world scale to preserve wild areas.
Efforts to raise awareness are having an effect, Wolfe says. Its working. Its making a difference. Somewhere around 75 percent of Americans now identify the environment as a very important issue for them. That was not true 10 or 20 years ago. Art for Arts sake Each of the 150 color photos in Edge of the Earth has been scanned carefully for the specific press it will be printed on at Graphic Arts Center in Portland, Ore. In the previous books Ive produced, weve never had such care taken in the prep process, Wolfe says. Featuring text by renowned environmental writer Art Davidson, the book will be printed with ecologically sound ink and paper, obtaining high standards in production while showcasing best practices in earth-friendly printing. The photos are stunning shots of beautiful places but, more than that, they are artistic compositions, many echoing the styles of master painters such as Dali, Monet and Seurat. Occasionally the images verge on abstraction, especially Wolfes mirrored images that resemble the inkblots of Rorshach tests. I love those, he says. Theres one panoramic photo of ice mirrored in water in the book that, if I were bold enough, Id print as a vertical. As the son of commercial artists from West Seattle, the young Wolfe painted and sold watercolors of his teachers childhood homes. He earned bachelors degrees in fine arts and art education at the University of Washington, graduating in 1977. His fine-art background, he says, influences everything he does. He even speaks like a painter, with frequent references to broad brushstrokes.
His early direction might have led him to a painting career were it not for his love of being outdoors with nature. He learned photography in college as a way to document his mountain-climbing hobby, and eventually it became his chief means of expression. One of the reasons Im not a painter by profession today is that its hard to create original works of art, he says. Its far easier for me to create compositions through the photographic medium than it was to sit down in front of my empty easel or watercolor paper and create original compositions, without it becoming infinitely redundant. Besides offering greater variety, photography was more suited to Wolfes high energy level. I painted in watercolor because I could do a painting in hours, as opposed to an oil painting, which took forever to dry, he says. And photography was even faster. I could afford to experiment with photography tenfold over committing four to six hours to a watercolor painting. The medium became more appropriate to getting me out the door. With more than 25 years in the business, Wolfe continues to be a legendarily prolific photographer. On the average year, his vivacious nature compels him to spend nine to 10 months on the road, shooting more than 2,000 rolls of film. If I have two days to kill, it drives me nuts. I love keeping my mind and body active, he says. I set my mental clock ahead to wherever Im going. I also have a high amount of energy, so I can keep awake for 20 hours in order to fall asleep at the appropriate time, and that helps me get over jet lag much faster.
Since then, the subjects of his books have been largely wildlife-related, but his heart has always been on craggy mountaintops, under the ocean surface, walking the ice fields and watching the desert sands. Back when he painted, his subjects were landscapes, not wildlife. Landscape is much more dear to my heart, and this book showcases that on a world level, he says. Eye of the artist Wolfe says he is puzzled by nature shooters who consider photography to be a lesser art form. They would say photography is more journalistic, that we are merely there to record whats out there. And I say thats bullshit, he proclaims. For me, a photographer is every bit as much an artist as a painter or any other artist because we have such control over how we record the land. Choices of lens, filter, film, time of day, angle, framing and various techniques belie the notion that a nature photographer is just a passive reporter, he argues. We have lots of control. Were not just there, aiming a camera and taking what natures providing. Im creating. He illustrates his point with photos from Edge of the Earth. His favorite creative image in the book is of a 2:30 a.m. sunrise shining through a piece of crystal polar ice. The oldest ice in a glacier is at the bottom and is more compressed, making it clear, he explains. When he saw a 150-pound chunk floating in an Icelandic lake, he fished it out with his tripod and propped it up on the bank to see how it would look with light shining through it. It was beautiful, he remembers. It was shaped like an Inuit soapstone carving, very primeval in shape, with a kind of blunt head and shoulders. So I erected this iceberg with stones and then started moving in with the camera and framing it. Its one of my favorite shots, primarily because I created it from elements that were right there. A shot like that is much more personally gratifying than one where you suddenly see a beautiful rainbow. The same iceberg floating in the lake would not have shown light through it. Thats where the eye of the artist comes in, he adds. And thats where I would refute anybody who says photographers are simply recorders of whats there. Nothing is black & white By making conscious choices about which subjects to shoot and how to present his images, Wolfe has also attracted a fair amount of controversy in his career. Almost a decade after sparking a heated international debate in nature photography, Wolfe looks back on Migrations, his book about the migratory patterns of animals.
At the time, Wolfe was surprised by the vehement reaction. What I was trying to say was that its not going to alter photography, he explains. Its not like this is the beginning of the end of photography, as a lot of people were assuming. I just thought that if they had any kind of historical perspective, theyd realize that any time a new medium or new glitch in the continuum of photography would occur, there was always hysterical and controversial reaction. It happened when black and white saw color come into the fray. People literally said the same thing about painting when photography came along, that no one will ever buy paintings. A general assumption at the time Migrations was published was that actual photography would give way to digitally created fantasy. And its not true. There are just as many people out taking pictures now, Wolfe says. This was an interesting tool being employed for this particular body of work, but it doesnt mean Im going to just sit in a room playing with computers. The criticism that he does feel was warranted, Wolfe says, is that the individual photos that were altered were not overtly identified, but he adds that the book made no attempt to fool anyone. He was disappointed that his fellow photographers did not come to his aid and admit that they had used the same technology. They just hid under the covers until the controversy died out. A lot of misinformation was circulated in the press, Wolfe says. People who didnt have an opportunity to interview me just made up their own answers. I saw in print that people said that the zebra photo was one animal replicated 100 times, which is simply not true, he says. To me, it was an interesting thing to have people nail me on an integrity issue when they werent using integrity to nail me, he says. They had a position to try to make it a black-and-white issue, and I felt that nothing is black and white. Its all gray. The matter is seldom brought up anymore, Wolfe says, and he doesnt think about it much. In retrospect, the controversy probably didnt hurt his career. Most people knew my name as a result of the controversy, and after a while they forgot the controversy. They just remembered my name. In the end, his opinion of the book, which won acclaim in design circles, is the same. Im so proud of that body of work, he says. If anything, being under the gun taught him to be a better businessman. Youve got to keep moving forward, he advises. Photographers who dont do well are the ones who go back to Mount Rainier every year because they have no other idea of what to shoot. You could equate that to writers block. The pure reason Im successful is that Im constantly thinking forward not just the next six months but the next six years, Im laying out books and ideas. So when those six years are up, were well into the middle of something. His new book features a foreword by Robert Redford, which Wolfe is excited about, although he knows that Redfords reputation as an active environmentalist may mean fewer companies will buy the book for corporate gifts. Nevertheless, hes confident that his new project will succeed. I think itll be fascinating, not only from a photographic perspective, but it will just tantalize people to see how great and glorious the world is, Wolfe says. I want to really intoxicate them with the sheer grandeur of the Earth. Beth Luce is a Seattle-based freelance writer.
Home: West Seattle. Studio/office: 1944 First Avenue South, Seattle; 206-332-0993; www.artwolfe.com; www.wildlandspress.com. Staff: Eight full-time employees; two nearly full-time. Galleries at REI stores: Seattle: 222 Yale Avenue North, 206-223-1944; Federal Way, Wash.: 2565 South Gateway Center Place, 253-941-4994; Denver: 1416 Platte Street, 720-855-7887. Favorite gear: Canon is the only 35mm I use, Wolfe says, which was really very appropriate for most of this work because I was dealing in ephemeral moments. He also uses a Pentax 6x7, a Hasselblad panoramic, a Fuji 617 panoramic and a couple of Mamiyas. I almost exclusively use tripods because I like to deliver a very tack-sharp image. Favorite film: Fuji Velvia, he says, because I think it delivers a full range of color. Theres a vibrancy to most of the images that just pops. Accolades: Alfred Eisenstaedt Magazine Photography Award, 2000; Outstanding Nature Photographer of the Year, North American Nature Photography Association, 1998; Rachel Carson Award, National Audubon Society, 1998; PhotoMedias Photography Person of the Year, 1996. His first self-published book, The Living Wild, won many awards and was voted Most Likely to Save the Planet at the Independent Publisher Book Awards, 2001. Advice for beginning nature photographers: In todays world, most photo agencies are full of the usual images, Wolfe says. Find subjects that are under-documented. There are thousands of obscure animals and even some well-known animals that arent photographed much. The same holds true for locations that are under-documented, such as Finland, Greenland and some countries in Africa. Projects in the works: 1) Vanishing Act, due out in 2005, a book of photos in which animals hide in plain sight. 2) One World, One Vision: The Photography of Art Wolfe, a seven-continent retrospective of Wolfes work at Seattles Frye Art Museum, May 3 through July 13. 3) A possible TV series or special about his work in the field. It would be an over-the-shoulder look at world travel and how a photographer goes about his craft, Wolfe says. It has all the drama you can imagine, and all the misery. |
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