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Web Profiles
By Joe Farace July, 2003
Web Profiles
“Yet do I fear
thy nature; It is too full o’ the milk of human kindness.”—Shakespeare’s
Macbeth
The World Wide Web takes
you around the world in pictures. Our tour guides this month are National
Geographic’s Sarah Leen, portraitist David Ford, and Monica Marcu,
a nature photographer with a sharp eye for urban landscapes. Then we’ll
head to Albatross Gallery for a peek at some birds that can’t
fly.
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Sarah
Leen has traversed the globe for “National Geographic”
for 20 years.
© 2002, Sarah Leen, All Rights Reserved
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Compassionate Documentarian
Sarah Leen (www.sarahleen.com)
is a photographer whose sweeping images combine a sense of place with a
poet’s vision. This can be immediately seen in her homepage image
of a young boy at the Carnival San Nicholas de los Ranchos in Mexico. A
former newspaper photographer, Leen has traversed the globe for National
Geographic for 20 years, capturing images of majesty and mystery but most
of all caring for the people and places she photographs. Her Bio section
is like her: flip, hip, but more importantly, warm.
Where many adventure photographers might have a portrait of themselves high
in the Himalayas covered in snow, instead you’ll find a smiling Leen
hugging a sheep inside a VW bus. Most of the work on the web site is from
her National Geographic assignments and books; she considers it a virtual
portfolio. But you will also find some of her personal and landscape images
that blew me away when I saw her presentation at FotoFusion 2003 (www.fotofusion.org).
Her Images gallery contains three collections: Without, With, and Among.
(I think she means people.) Without includes awe-inspiring landscapes that
capture timeless moments. No, that’s not Stonehenge, it’s Carhenge,
an exact duplicate in Alliance, Nebraska, that was created using junk cars,
yet photographed not with a smirk or a smile, but with the same loving care
shown for her natural landscape images.
“With” features people but also includes a few animals (she
doesn’t call it wildlife photography) and I think it’s these
two collections that exemplify the elegiac center that imbues all of Leen’s
documentary work, but is shown here in its simplest, purest form. “Among”
includes some of her portraits where her subjects are aware she’s
with them and are glad to have her around—something that might not
be universally said for the welcome given most photographers. Her image
of a suburban American kid holding a rubber shark has the same love and
respect for the subject as that of an ancient Siberian fisherman. The Assignment
section contains extended excerpts from National Geographic as exotic as
Djenne, Mali, or as banal as Clovis, California, but she captures both with
the same blend into the scenery approach that many try to emulate but few
ever achieve. Leen is a modern master; click on Calendar to attend one of
her workshops. |
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David
Ford’s web site focuses on his fashion and fitness
imagery but also contains his sport, scenic, and wedding
photography.
© 2002, David Ford, All Rights Reserved
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Fashion And Fitness
David Ford’s web site (www.davidford
photography.com) focuses on fashion and fitness imagery but also contains
sport, scenic, and wedding photography. His Portraiture section is full
of small thumbnail images of active people and shows his unique fashion
style in portraits. They are as varied as a black and white shot of a female
subject in a business suit and a sexy portrait made on concrete steps. In
both images, Ford puts his own unique spin and point of view on each photograph
making obvious emotional contact with the subject and at the same time presenting
a fresh perspective on what might easily become ordinary.
If you thought the thumbnails were tiny, the larger (when clicked) images
are only semi-medium sized and although imprinted with his copyright could
easily be larger to help you better appreciate his art and craft. Sport
contains images of physique sports that you may like or not; I didn’t.
Living in The Great White North gives Ford a chance to make interesting
winter images, and “Snowy Fence Post” is one of his best. The
lonely aspen leaf in “Alone” would look great hanging on anybody’s
wall.
Ford’s wedding photography manages to mix tradition with fun. His
monochrome image of a bride with (what appears to be) her two brothers in
a headlock is priceless as is an obviously staged, but nevertheless cute
picture of a snowball fight among the bridal party. Unlike many photographers’
sites, Ford’s contains a complete price list for services, including
session and print prices. Since he is located in Alberta, Canada, I assume
the prices are in Canadian dollars. The whole site has a classy design and
is easy to navigate and loads fast even on my dial-up connection. (I’m
assured that broadband is coming to Brighton, Colorado, but I’m still
waiting.) |
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Monica
G. Marcu’s site may focus on nature and wildlife
photographs, but there’s also some brilliant architecture
and urban landscapes that can be found.
© 2002, Monica G. Marcu, All Rights Reserved
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With Love
No kidding, that’s what it says on Monica G. Marcu’s homepage
(www.photomarcu.com) and I believe
it. Any web site that includes quotes from Proust and showcases a (really
good) picture of a praying mantis is worth a look. The site may focus on
nature and wildlife photographs, but there’s also some brilliant architecture
and urban landscapes to be seen in the Cityscape and New Images collections.
The Miscellaneous section contains everything that doesn’t fit into
the other sections and features an exquisite (and funny) picture called
“Two Doors, No Entry.” Oh, yeah. She has captions on the photographs,
although I would have loved to know where that particular image was made.
Many of the images feature clever captions combined with outstanding technical
and aesthetic skills that when combined are most striking.
For example, “A Working Day in the Life of a Butterfly” is a
colorful image found in her Flowers gallery. All galleries are displayed
on the homepage and can also be accessed by a menu on the left-hand side
of the screen and images are displayed in separate pop-up windows. Users
of Earthlink’s (www.earthlink.net)
Pop-Up Blocker software will have to turn it off when visiting the site
in order to see her thumbnails in a larger size. Marcu is a terrifically
versatile photographer whose images are for sale at oh-so-modest prices.
Check out the Order section for details. Marcu told me that she updates
her web site at least once a month, so some of the details and individual
photographs may change by the time you read this. |
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No
matter where he takes you, Stefan Lundgren’s photographs
are simply breathtaking. You will see these chilly parts
of the world like you have never before.
© 2002, Albatross Gallery LLC, All Rights Reserved
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Birds Of A Different
Feather
Albatross Gallery (www.albatrossnet.com)
is the work of web designer Tommy Stovall and Swedish photographer Stefan
Lundgren and is based on their “real” gallery in Sedona, Arizona.
The dramatic images of the Arctic and Antarctica you find here are seasoned
with photographs of the American Southwest, but it is the stunningly,
stylish images of penguins that will steal your heart. That’s why
I went to the Antarctica gallery first: Instead of thumbnails, you’re
greeted with a list of image titles. After selecting one—I picked
“Full Moon Over Tabular Iceberg,” surely the Antarctic equivalent
of Adams’ “Moonrise, Hernandez”—you’ll find
navigational arrows allowing you to see the previous or next image. All
images are fully framed and matted, after all, this is a gallery and mounted/matted
or framed images can be purchased by clicking on “Prints/Prices.”
Defying all recent web trends of providing as little information as possible,
detailed captions for each image may be seen by clicking on “Image
Info” and both Stovall and Lundgren are to be congratulated for
both the content and the manner in which it’s displayed. Heading
north, there are fewer images, but they are spectacular, showing polar
bears at home in their natural environments. Getting too cold? Head to
the Southwest and warm up with stately, colorful images of Monument Valley
and other iconic areas of the American West. No matter where he takes
you, Lundgren’s photographs are breathtaking and you will see those
chilly parts of the world like you’ve never seen them before. The
site’s design is simple, with a focus on the photographs, and it’s
easy to find your way around.
Around The World With
Shutterbug
It’s not too late; some readers should have this issue in time to
participate in Take Your Camera To Work Day 2003. On May 21st, take your
film or digital camera to work and make photographs of your colleagues
and show the world what your day is really like along with the time of
day you made it on www.takeyourcameratoworkday.com.
In the meantime, if you’d like to recommend your own or a friend’s
web site, please e-mail me at
editorial@shutterbug.net.
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