Tag: Southwest

  • Yellows in November

    Yellows in November

    The arid forests of the Southwest are beautiful in the fall. Against backdrops of blue-gray junipers and piñons the vibrant yellows stand out. Cottonwoods are the iconic fall tree, and for good reason.

    Another cottonwood offers an impressive display of fall color in the Southwest.

    But look past the cottonwoods and you’ll see explosions of color everywhere.

    Fall colors in the Southwest are magical.

    Hikes and walks through these forests present chaotic scenes, often without a clear subject. In this way, they offer less popular photographic compositions—given the current vogue for dominate subjects—but call to mind the sometimes messy and busy compositions of people like Eliot Porter.

    A tree that will never again drop a leaf.

    Even when a single subject dominates the frame, you can’t escape the chaos that surrounds it.

    Fall color high above the desert in the Southwest.

    There’s a freedom to photographing the Southwest, a freedom that evokes the mythology of these wild and untamed lands, and the adventures they encourage.

    (These photos were taken during a trip to the Southwest one November not long ago.)

  • Mark Klett on photographing

    Mark Klett on photographing

    I make pictures when I can, like other latter-day explorers who work during the week.… No important mandate to chart some vanishing wilderness subsidizes these outings, and even a short drive into the land can become an adventure. Weekend exploration may not be what it used to be, but it’s a compelling act nonetheless.

    Mark Klett, Revealing Territory (Albuquerque, 1992), 163–164.