Thursday, May 10, 2012

Intimate Landscape

An article in the US magazine Outdoor Photography, May 2012, pp 48-53, 'The Forgotten Intimate Landscape: Think like Eliot Porter, and adopt a "less is more" approach to your landscapes' caught my attention.

There is no real definition of 'Intimate Landscape' it is not big vistas or macro images but something inbetween. "The lighting was usually flat from cloud cover or open shad, and great magic hour illumination wasn't part of the equation. Instead, Porter relied on pattern, texture, colour, reflections and tight, immaculate compositions. Te horizon and sky were often missing, and many of his shots were wonderfully abstract.  ... Porter tried to encapsulate all of nature's grandeur inot a smaller space, each photograph being a symbol for the deep canyons, spiky peaks and rusing oceans and rivers just out of the scene."

From Wikipedia search on Eliot Porter viewed 10 May 2012

Eliot Furness Porter (December 6, 1901 – November 2, 1990) was an Americanphotographer best known for his color photographs of nature[1].

Around 1930 he was introduced to Ansel Adams by a friend of the family and to Alfred Stieglitz by his brother Fairfield Porter[2]. Stieglitz continued to critique Porter’s black and white work, now taken with a small Linhof view camera[3]. In 1938, Stieglitz showed Porter's work in his New York City gallery[4]. The exhibit's success prompted Porter to leave Harvard and pursue photography full-time[4]. In the 1940s, he began working in color with Eastman Kodak's new dye transfer process, a technique Porter would use his entire career.[2]
Porter's reputation increased following the publication of his 1962 book, In Wildness Is the Preservation of the World[4]. Published by the Sierra Club, the book featured Porter's color nature studies of the New England woods and quotes by Henry David Thoreau[2]. A best-seller, several editions of the book have been printed. Porter served as a director of the Sierra Club from 1965 to 1971.[5] He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1971.[6]
Porter traveled extensively to photograph ecologically important and culturally significant places. He published books of photographs from Glen Canyon in UtahMaineBaja CaliforniaGalápagos IslandsAntarcticaEast Africa, and Iceland. His cultural studies included MexicoEgyptChinaCzechoslovakia, and ancient Greek sites.
James Gleick’s book Chaos: Making a New Science (1987) caused Porter to reexamine his work in the context of chaos theory. They collaborated on a project published in 1990 as Nature's Chaos, which combined his photographs with a new essay by Gleick.[3] Porter died in Santa Fe, New Mexico in 1990 and bequeathed his personal archive to the Amon Carter Museum in Fort WorthTexas.[3].
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Many of his images are viewable on Google here.

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More and varied image by Porter can be seen at Carter Museum website in the Eliot Porter Collection Guide these are a few I've downloaded for the site.







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