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BIOGRAPHY/ARTIST STATEMENT
Blame it on the Farm Journal. As a 5th grade fund raiser in Upper Michigan, I sold the most
subscriptions, winning a plastic Ansco 620 camera for my efforts.
Perhaps the frustration of trying to capture a decent black and
white image with such a camera at such an early age lead me on
this odessey to capture the "perfect" image using the "best" equipment.
I was born and raised in rural Upper Michigan, so nature has always
been a large part of my life. My first real job was in Isle Royale
National Park, and I quickly realized my new 35mm rangefinder
camera was woefully inadequate for photographing subjects like
a moose feeding in a pond. Thus continued my never-ending quest
for quality.
After college (BS and MS in Biology, Northern Michigan University),
I began working seasonally for the National Park Service in Denali
National Park (Alaska), in various jobs (park technician, caribou
researcher, road maintenance) so that I could remain close to
(one might say "be part of") the wonders of Nature. And to be
able to record what I experienced on film.
Somewhere along the way my primary interest refocused from pictures
of wildlife in their surroundings to images of the individual
animals themselves (in other words, portraits). When approached
properly and given adequate time, an animal begins to ignore the
photographer, and goes on with its life--eating, interacting,
breeding, sleeping, etc. Close observation reveals the extent
of awareness an animal in the wild must have to survive--from
the smallest prey that must elude the predators, to the inter-species
relationships of the predators themselves. Using my biological
background and decades of field experience as a photographer,
I try to anticipate a subject's actions, reactions and interactions,
hoping to keep ahead of the action instead of only following it.
And I emphasise try, since I am still amazed by the complexity and unpredictability
of Nature.
When the wilds of Alaska started to become too tame, I extended
my image quest to Africa. First to the marvels of Kenya (very
few places can surpass the quality and quantity of wildlife on
the Masai Mara), then to the deserts and arid bushveld of Southern
Africa. Most recently, in part because of escalading political
unrest in Kenya, my interest has shifted to the Okavango Delta
area of Bostswana--home to the last stronghold of wild dogs, and
herds of migrating elephants and zebra.
Over the 22+ years as a professional photographer, my images have
appeared in most of the major wildlife and nature oriented magazines
(e.g., Alaska, Audubon, Geo, National and International Wildlife, Natural History, Ranger Rick), in books (National Geographic Society, National Wildlife Federation, Readers
Digest), and in calendars (Audubon, Sierra Club, and World Wildlife Fund).
While primarily licensing images myself (as stock photography)
and selling Limited Edition Photographic prints, I am also represented
by Ardea (London) and Bruce Coleman Inc. (New York) stock photo
agencies.
Finally, all of the animals featured on this website are wild,
not trained models from a game farm. The next time you see a perfectly
composed, well-lighted, close-up picture of a bobcat kitten hanging
by its front legs from a picturesque tree snag with a colorful
background of wildflowers, ask yourself "what are the odds of
a photographer finding this in the wild?" And the next time you
see an aerial picture of elephants or any large mammals stampeding
across the plains or swamp, ask yourself if the photographer captured
a natural occurence, or caused the stampede for the picture? Only
your complaints to the magazine editor will dry up the market
for such pictures. If they could, the animals would thank you. |
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