A full and complete retrospective of one of the world's foremost adventure and outdoor photographers. This description may be from another edition of this product.
If you like nature photography, this is a must-have item for your book collection. Big and painstakingly produced, with a sampling from Rowell's adventure travels in the world's great mountain ranges, as well as his work around the Sierras. Especially memorable are a few dizzying shots looking down from the middle of big-wall climbs (where Rowell first made his mark as a climber) and several highly unusual landscape shots where Rowell has unobtrusively inserted himself as a casual hiker enjoying the background. All the selected shots are killer, including more animal shots than you might expect, and the editors have included a remarkable selection of short appreciations from Rowell's family, friends and colleagues. A much-deserved tribute.
An Amazing Prospective on Mountain Scenery aqnd The use of Natural Light
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
This is for me an avid non-professional outdoor photographer, a primer on how to use light and color in getting the most out of your scene. There are some amazing photos in this book, some so surreal the almost don't look like a photo, but they are. I have been an avid High Sierra backpacker for 33 years and have been to most of the locations that he photographed in the Sierras,so I know what the locations look like. I can't begin to describe how good these photos are. All of the photos are amazing because Mr. Rowell knew how to compose the photos and use the light of sunrises, sunsets, and clouds to get the best possible scenario to light photos. Besides the inpeccable photos, the writing is also very informative and descriptive of his life and expeditions that he took throughout his lifetime. If you like the outdoors, or have any photographic inclinations at all buy this book! It's amazing!!
Perspective on a Retrospective
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
I received the book as an early Christmas present but I doubt that I would have purchased it otherwise. That would have been my loss. As an amateur photographer for 40+ years, I'm familiar with Rowell's work and techniques. To be candid, I find much of Rowell's work a bit unnatural. His mastery of the split neutral density filter, while undeniable, often resulted in many of his photos being a bit "over the top". While I understand that such filters are sometimes needed to control the brightness range of certain scenes on film, they also sometimes tend to impart tonalities not found anywhere in nature. The Singh Ray filters that Rowell used are said to be color-neutral. If that's true, I simply don't understand where some of those sky colors originated. I've used several different Kodachromes as well as Velvia and am familiar with those emulsions. Even Velvia's super-saturated colors don't really explain what's going on here. That said, Rowell's photos are often mesmerizing. That Rowell knew his craft is obvious. One can easily become lost in the sometimes surreal worlds that Rowell could create. The reproductions are superb and the photos are presented here in sizes large enough to appreciate. Anyone familiar with photography has to marvel at the sharpness of Rowell's handheld shots. How anyone could hang over an abyss and come away with such technically superb results is beyond belief. Yet, Rowell did it and did it consistently. There are also shots that he obviously made from a tripod. In these, Rowell realized the full potential of his Nikkor lenses. Being familiar with Nikon lenses, the list of lenses that Rowell used came as a bit of a surprise. Several were the Nikon "Series E" lenses which, in their day, were considered unworthy of professional use. So much for that theory. I'll never be a huge fan of Rowell's photography, at least not the way that I am of John Shaw's or Frans Lanting's. However, fan or not, how can anyone deny Rowell's contributions? Not only as a photographer, but as a naturalist, adventurer, conservationist and, most of all, as a man who left the Earth a better place than he found it. The world is certainly a lesser place without Galen Rowell.
Galen Rowell's Legacy Captured Beautifully in a Knockout Tribute Book
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
I had the privilege of taking a photography class from the renowned Galen Rowell a few years before his tragic death in 2002. I remember very well how he told of his painstaking effort in racing across a plateau to capture the end of a rainbow as it looked like it was landing on the Potala Palace in Lhasa, Tibet. His images have inspired me to take my travel photography more seriously, even if his techniques went well over my head. Fortunately, the Sierra Club has seen fit to produce this handsome tribute, which contains about 175 of his most impressive photos, many never before published. I own a couple of his photo collections already, but the cumulative effect of this book is mesmerizing. Even though he was heralded as the natural successor to Ansel Adams because of the vivid landscapes he often captured through his lens, Rowell was actually at his best when he showed the striking juxtaposition of a human element in his nature pictures, for example, showing rock climber Ron Kauk precariously clinging to the underside of a precipice on a Marin beach. What comes across quite clearly is a man who fulfilled his life philosophies every day, a passionate melding of artist, adventurer and environmentalist, who made a pint of anticipating his opportunities while living in the moment. To reinforce this, the editors have incorporated several testimonials from Rowell's colleagues and admirers such as Tom Brokaw, mountaineer Conrad Anker and photographer Frans Lanting, who lends particular insight into Rowell's singular motivation in transcending the reality of what he saw. Lanting's comments lend context to Rowell's frequent use of the split neutral density filter, which intensified the color saturation in many of his most famous photos, some to a point where the image can look almost artificially enhanced. Case in point, take a look at how deeply orange the skies are in some of his sunrise photos. At the same time, the startling images he captured in Patagonia and the Karakoram Himalayas remain unparalleled, and there is hardly a more serendipitous moment than when he captured the wispy cloud formation over the split rock in the Eastern Sierras. Rowell's vision remains his own, and he leaves a legacy of photographs that resonate deeply in this book. This is a must-have for his admirers.
The Ansel Adams of Color Photography!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
Galen Rowell pioneered "participatory (wilderness) photography," in which the photographer becomes an active creative participant in fine-art image making. An accomplished outdoorsman and adventurer, his deep emotional connection to nature pervades virtually all of his photographs. Another signature characteristic is his vivid use of color during the "magic hour" (at sunrise and sunset); indeed, it is arguably true that Rowell was as much a "master of color" as Ansel Adams was a master of black & white. (It is fitting that he received the Ansel Adams Award for his contributions to the art of wilderness photography in 1984.) The life of this extraordinary artist was cut tragically short in 2002 when the plane carrying Rowell and his wife (Barbara Rowell, herself an accomplished photographer) crashed as they were both returning home from a Workshop in the Sierra Mountains. Rowell's famous photograph, "Rainbow over the Potala Palace" (which appears among the first few two-page-spread images lovingly reproduced in this fine retrospective volume) is, according to Rowell himself, one the great photos of his life. I remember seeing it years ago for the first time, and was then (as I still am now) simply in awe. It is a magnificent Wagnerian-like "epic" photograph; a perfect symbolic synergy of aesthetics and spiritual depth. It is also a quintessential example of Rowell's lifelong practice of participatory creation. According to Rowell, this image was captured not long after a trekking group (consisting of about 15 people) that Rowell was a part of in Tibet was called to dinner. A rainbow suddenly appeared in a field below them, though not (from the point of view of the trekkers at that particular moment, as they were all settling down to dinner) in the spot that it appears in Rowell's subsequent photograph. Rowell, relying on his years of experience with optical phenomena in diverse environments, imagined in his mind's eye the precise spot he must get to from which the rainbow would appear to emanate from the roofs of the Dalai Lama's Potala Palace. Dropping his dinner, and running into the fields as fast as he could to get to where he knew he had to position himself, he managed to capture this incredible photograph. None of the other trekker/photographers budged an inch; although many later "claimed" to have captured the same image. In fact, none of the other images even came close to having the same drama, with the rainbows in other "versions" (having been captured from obviously wrong angles) either badly missing the Palace or invisible altogether. Only in Rowell's photograph does the rainbow rise majestically out from the Palace. Only Rowell had the forethought, intuition and strength of will to get himself, his camera and his "eye" into the right place at the right time. Rowell's "Rainbow over the Potala Palace" (as do *all* of Rowell's finest efforts!) teaches us that a great natural scene is not always (perhaps even rarely!) enough, by it
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