• Home
    • New Images
    • Alaska
    • Arizona
    • Black & White
    • California
    • California - Yosemite
    • Colorado
    • Iceland
    • Hawaii
    • Lake Tahoe
    • Lake Tahoe - Emerald Bay
    • Lake Tahoe - Details
    • Utah
    • Wildlife
    • Wildlife of Tahoe
    • Yellowstone & Tetons
    • Private Reserve Collection
  • Workshops
  • Insider Chronicles
    • eBooks
    • Gift Certificates
    • Lifestyle Portraits
    • Thin Air Culture
    • Galleries
  • About
  • Contact
Menu

Jon Paul Gallery

  • Home
  • Portfolios
    • New Images
    • Alaska
    • Arizona
    • Black & White
    • California
    • California - Yosemite
    • Colorado
    • Iceland
    • Hawaii
    • Lake Tahoe
    • Lake Tahoe - Emerald Bay
    • Lake Tahoe - Details
    • Utah
    • Wildlife
    • Wildlife of Tahoe
    • Yellowstone & Tetons
    • Private Reserve Collection
  • Workshops
  • Insider Chronicles
  • Shop
    • eBooks
    • Gift Certificates
    • Lifestyle Portraits
    • Thin Air Culture
    • Galleries
  • About
  • Contact

Finding Calm Within the Storm

November 16, 2019

Blizzard, Cottonwoods, River

November 15, 2019

Being a large format film photographer is an interesting avocation today. I came to shooting big film with the desire to produce large, beautiful, clear prints of the natural world. The outdoors provides me with more than subject matter. When I go “out” I am provided an energetic escape. As I like to say, I go to a beautiful place and, if all the conditions come together, I am moved to compose an image of one small, spectacular piece of that place. This has always been my source of creativity, escape, energy, rejuvenation, and ultimately, my art.

Occasionally, I get caught up in the world. I won’t delve into the details, but I lose my excitement, or motivation, or belief in the art that most often fuels me. When this happens, I find that pushing through difficult situations in the name of art can bring me back to a place of passion and creativity. The image above, “Blizzard, Cottonwoods, River”, came to life during such an experience.

Last winter the Lake Tahoe area, where I live, received massive amounts of snow. During one particular storm, all roads were closed, and we didn’t leave our home for four days. While the snow dumped, I geared up and headed out on foot. When I saw these trees silhouetted in the distance, I left the road and trudged, first through waste deep snow, then through chest deep snow, until I reached a clearing near the river. I slowly walked in a small circle until I had compacted enough snow to create a dense enough platform upon which I could set up my tripod, large format camera, and myself. After composing my image, loading a film holder into the camera and metering the scene, I waited until the snow fell heavily and the wind blew hard, creating true whiteout conditions. Then, I clicked the shutter release and exposed one sheet of color film.

The image is quiet, seemingly still. I think that is because I was able to convey how I felt in this place, in these conditions, when I experienced this scene and composed this image. With the world around us moving at a crazy pace, full of divisiveness and buried in unrealistic expectations and minimal attention spans, it is interesting that the one place I can find tranquility is within a storm. I don’t wish to mirror the world by providing images in technicolor conjured up in the computer in order to hold a viewers attention for 8 seconds and earn a “like” on social media. I want to share the power of the natural world as a remedy to those things. I hope to compose images that collectors will escape to when the world is overwhelming. These images can be both serene and powerful. I hope images like “Blizzard, Cottonwoods, River” speak to you as they do to me. The magic of big film is that it enables me to make these moments eternal. My experience, in that moment in time, can be shared and experienced forever.

After I’ve completed my photographic process in the field, I pack everything away, hoist my pack, and toil back through the conditions that originally motivated me to find beauty. As I trudged through the snow, I wondered if I had gotten it right. Was my exposure correct? Was the lens free of snow? Did the camera shake? I question my sanity, realizing I am wet, cold, tired and have along slow hike ahead of me. After several weeks, I received my developed film. The exposure was good, details / focus clear, my memory was awakened. As I drum scan my film and work in my modern digital darkroom, I question every subtle detail. I leave and come back. It takes days. In the end, my collectors will judge my vision. If you are moved as I was during the creation of this image, it was worth suffering for my art.

That is “The Fine Art of Nature”.

This image is ready to be released and is available for your collection! Please contact me directly and I will help make your purchase possible. Click Here for assistance!

Details:
Camera: Canham 5x7 Metal Field Camera with 4x5 Film Back
Lens: Caltar IIN (Rodenstock) 90mm
Film: Fuji Provia 100F 4x5 inch transparency film
Tripod: Gitzo 1325 Carbon Fiber
Tripod Head: Really Right Stuff BH55 Ball Head
 

DON'T MISS OUT ON WHAT I HAVE TO SHARE. HERE ARE SOME HELPFUL LINKS:

Subscribe to My YouTube Channel: https://goo.gl/dJXMUQ
My Free Fine Art of Nature Newsletter: https://www.jonpaulgallery.com/newsletter/
My website: https://www.jonpaulgallery.com/
Photography Workshops / Tours: https://www.jonpaulgallery.com/tours/
My Blog: https://www.jonpaulgallery.com/blog/

In film photography, Lake Tahoe Photography, Jon Paul Gallery, Landscape Photography, Large Format Photography, winter photography Tags large format film, 4x5, landscape photography, winter photography, jon paul gallery, fuji provia
← Golden Hour, Sand Harbor OverlookWinter Musings of a Large Format Photographer →

Free
Insider Chronicles

We respect your privacy.

Thank you!

Latest Posts

Featured
Feb 7, 2020
"Lenticular Sunset & Inversion, Emerald Bay, Lake Tahoe"
Feb 7, 2020
Feb 7, 2020
Jan 30, 2020
"Eternal Light"
Jan 30, 2020
Jan 30, 2020
Jan 24, 2020
"Corn Lily One"
Jan 24, 2020
Jan 24, 2020
Jan 18, 2020
Fallen Leaves, Liquid Light
Jan 18, 2020
Jan 18, 2020
Jan 10, 2020
Remembering the Experience...and Photography.
Jan 10, 2020
Jan 10, 2020
Jan 3, 2020
Sunset Evolution, Sand Harbor, Lake Tahoe
Jan 3, 2020
Jan 3, 2020
Dec 10, 2019
Fall, On the Rocks
Dec 10, 2019
Dec 10, 2019
Dec 4, 2019
Golden Hour, Sand Harbor Overlook
Dec 4, 2019
Dec 4, 2019
Nov 16, 2019
Finding Calm Within the Storm
Nov 16, 2019
Nov 16, 2019
Dec 4, 2018
Winter Musings of a Large Format Photographer
Dec 4, 2018
Dec 4, 2018

PO Box 9728, South Lake Tahoe, CA 96158

530-545-2896   jonpaul@jonpaulgallery.com