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My approach to photography has gradually evolved over the years. What started out as attempts to photograph beautiful places
and to show people where I had been, has slowly transformed itself into a process of trying to capture the inner essence or
quality of the landscapes and nature that I am drawn to.
For me, the natural world is my proper home. When I am on a trail in the high country, or in the desert, my senses come
alive and I am the most aware of and in touch with the environment around me. Photography is easy and natural for me in these
moments and time slips away unnoticed.
At the same time, photography has become far more challenging. I now try to capture an ephemeral moment when the play
of light and shadow, color, textures, and patterns show a special quality of a subject. These qualities or "character
and personality" of the natural environment, for lack of a better term, can be bold and obvious, and at other times subtle
and hidden. But they can speak to us in powerful and spiritual ways that we need to be attuned to and aware of, or they will
pass us by unnoticed.
In trying to capture those moments in my photography, I have tried to convey the sense of being there -- the three-dimensional
feel of the environment and its unique character and personality that I am drawn to and which resonates for me.
In honoring and trying to capture and hold that special and transitory quality of each of these places, I have tried to
convey to the viewer the awe and emotional connection that I had when I made the picture. Hopefully, in each image, the viewer
will be able to not only see, but to feel, in that moment in time, the quality of light and color, the patterns of the trees
and grasses, the smoothness of worn rocks, the morning chill of a mountain stream, and the touch of the wind.
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