Monday, July 25, 2011
"Winter in Acadia" has been updated
I've just updated my website with new images from my ongoing project to document Acadia National Park, during and after winter storms.
It's hard to explain the awe & respect that I feel when I'm watching & photographing the angry, roiling ocean from a snowy, rocky ledge in Acadia National Park during a blizzard.
It took four years of trying to make it happen, but I was finally able to get on top of Cadillac Mt. to shoot sunrise. This was one of the essential images, as the summit of Cadillac is the first place in the US where the sunshine hits at sunrise. The 3.5 mile road road to the top is closed in the winter, so I had two options: start snowshoeing through new snow (i.e. deep!) at 3 am, with a camera backpack, tripod and other essentials; or I could try and find someone with a snowmobile. It took a year or two, but I finally found a local guy named "Nick" who I have hired a few times to take me and my gear to the top.
Hopefully the images on my website will show the energy & drama during the storm & the quiet stillness after the storm departs.
Your comments are welcomed.
http://www.jakewyman.com/
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
My focus....
Recently, I have re-focused my attention to myself & my work.
In the next week, I will be posting blurbs and images from recent projects for some new and ongoing clients, so please check back.
In the next week, I will be posting blurbs and images from recent projects for some new and ongoing clients, so please check back.
Monday, April 4, 2011
A Walk in the Woods
If you know where to look, Spring is a perfect time to find the remains of a brutally cold & snowy Winter; or from hungry predators, like coyotes
On Saturday afternoon I headed to one of my favorite, largely remote, wooded areas close to home, and in about four hours time, I was rewarded with a few little treasures, which were captured with my iPhone:
On Saturday afternoon I headed to one of my favorite, largely remote, wooded areas close to home, and in about four hours time, I was rewarded with a few little treasures, which were captured with my iPhone:
Skull & rack of an eight-point buck (as found) |
Smaller Skunk or Raccoon? |
A "shed" |
Ribs & Vertebrae (Any guesses) |
Friday, March 18, 2011
Flexibility on location
Being flexible is something that I learned many years ago, and I was reminded of this with a recent assignment.
A magazine for doctors had located me on the Find A Photographer (FAP) feature of ASMP , and they wanted me to shoot a portrait of a young physician at Yale University Hospital. The thrust of the article was about "environmentally responsible initiatives in medical practices".
With the subject-a very nice doctor who I'll call Dr. "S", I scouted locations at the hospital about a week before the shoot, and we found a few areas that would work. Not great, but ok, given the parameters. his year has been quite snowy & cold, so shooting inside was our only viable option.
On the afternoon of the shoot, I arrived early to make sure that I had enough time to meet with the very helpful Media Relations person at the Hospital, whose name is Mark. At some point in our conversation before the subject arrived, he mentioned another area of the hospital, with "great light".
We had time to spare, so off we went. Mark was right, and our timing would be perfect for the time of day, so we contacted Susan to let her know about the new location.
Naturally diffused sunlight was complimented with a bit of fill light from a single Dynalight head & a soft bank. Some of the greenery was there & I borrowed the plant that Susan held in some of the images.
The happy client chose the image above.
A magazine for doctors had located me on the Find A Photographer (FAP) feature of ASMP , and they wanted me to shoot a portrait of a young physician at Yale University Hospital. The thrust of the article was about "environmentally responsible initiatives in medical practices".
With the subject-a very nice doctor who I'll call Dr. "S", I scouted locations at the hospital about a week before the shoot, and we found a few areas that would work. Not great, but ok, given the parameters. his year has been quite snowy & cold, so shooting inside was our only viable option.
On the afternoon of the shoot, I arrived early to make sure that I had enough time to meet with the very helpful Media Relations person at the Hospital, whose name is Mark. At some point in our conversation before the subject arrived, he mentioned another area of the hospital, with "great light".
We had time to spare, so off we went. Mark was right, and our timing would be perfect for the time of day, so we contacted Susan to let her know about the new location.
Naturally diffused sunlight was complimented with a bit of fill light from a single Dynalight head & a soft bank. Some of the greenery was there & I borrowed the plant that Susan held in some of the images.
The happy client chose the image above.
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Brian Lanker, Photographer & Filmmaker
Brian Lanker, the Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist and who built an incredible career working for Life, Sports Illustrated & National Geographic, has died. His photograph of his future wife giving birth via the Lamaze method won the 1973 Pulitzer for Photography while he was working at The Topeka Capital-Journal, with Rich Clarkson as his photography editor.
He later published the beautiful book of B & W photographs, "I Dream A World:Portraits of Black Women Who Changed America"
To read more about his amazing life: Brian Lanker, 63, Loses Brief Battle With Cancer
He later published the beautiful book of B & W photographs, "I Dream A World:Portraits of Black Women Who Changed America"
To read more about his amazing life: Brian Lanker, 63, Loses Brief Battle With Cancer
© Brian Lanker |
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
A Gallup of Common Redpolls at a Feeder in VT.
Common Redpolls |
While staying with friends at a rented house in Southern Vermont a few weeks ago, we were visited a few times a day by a feeding "gallup" or flock, of Common Redpolls.
These hardy little finches thrive in colder weather, and they mostly live in the Northern parts of North America. Every other year, depending on the food sources in Winter, they will move south (irruption) to Northern New England and New York to find food.
From the Wikipedia page on Bird Migration:
"Sometimes circumstances such as a good breeding season followed by a food source failure the following year lead to irruptions in which large numbers of a species move far beyond the normal range. Bohemian Waxwing and Common Crossbills show this unpredictable variation in annual numbers."
This image is now included in my Getty Images stock library.
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Oh Well......
Conde Nast Traveler magazine used it as a double-page spread opener (unusual for a vertical image?), for their story on "Extreme Hotels", in the February 2011 issue.
Nice.
But, the least that they could have done was to correctly spell my last name in the Credit sections in the back of the magazine! "Wymon"?!
They have promised to print a correction in the May issue.
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
"CHILI" by Koen Wessing
Some of you know that I have always been a fairly passionate collector of photobooks, and I'd like to share my most recent acquisition.
“Chili, September 1973” is a very rare first printing of the first edition of Koen Wessing’s critically acclaimed photobook which was published by De Bezigle Bij, Amsterdam in 1973. It contains 24 black-and gravures (most of them double page) and measuring approximately 10.75” x 7.75”, the book is bound in illustrated wrappers.
*From the book “The Photobook: A History” by Parr & Gerry Badger:
"The Dutch photographer Koen Wessing was on the streets of Santiago immediately after the coup happened. His gritty documentary pictures were quickly published in this no frills, extremely elegant photobook … There are not many images in the book, but each is carefully considered, modest and succinct ... despite the difficulties of taking photographs in such a tense and difficult situation. The main thrust of the book is the coup’s immediate aftermath, the shock and grief of the people, the rounding up of Allende’s supporters by the Army, and their herding into the now notorious National Stadium in Santiago, where many would be tortured and killed. Wessing vividly captures one of these executions, in a two-page sequence that forms the book’s climax.”
For some time, I had been looking for a nice copy of this book, and I found an antiquarian book dealer in Amsterdam who had a copy. As he had met Wessing a few times. I asked him if he could get the book signed. A week or two later, I received an email from Jaap (the dealer), and this is what he wrote on January 10th, 2011:
"To get Koen's signature was not easy, because I don't know where he lives at the moment, and to meet him downtown, (which was not so difficult in the past) has become complicated because Koen is very ill, he suffers from lung cancer and leads as far as I can judge a solitary life and does not appear in public often. The only place that he frequents now and then is a pub near the Spui, where the weekly bookmarket is. There I saw met him recently , and although he was in company, I could ask him for his signature. He agreed."
Koen Wessing died less than three weeks later on February 2nd, 2011.
Monday, February 28, 2011
SB3 in Philadelphia
I've just returned from Philadelphia, where I participated in SB3 with four other Board members from CT-ASMP, and my head is spinning with ideas, inspiration & impressions!
If you haven't yet signed up for SB3 in Chicago, do it.
You can register by following the link above.
And for those of you who are asking about my "Escalator Legs" video, stay tuned!
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