and then some
June 26th, 2009

making the connection

Of Great and Mortal MenOf Great and Mortal MenHetch Hetchy Valley in Yosemite National Park was drowned in 1913 to create a reservoir that would bring water and energy to the sprawling cities of California as far south as Los Angeles. A lot of people never really think about where their water comes from besides out of their tap or in a plastic bottle.  A lot of us have lost our connection to the source of our water and our food. For many it starts in the aisle at the supermarket where most food isn’t even found in it’s original state.

In 2006 I made my first trip to this part of Yosemite. A few weeks later I found myself in the central valley of California near the Salton Sea after being in Joshua Tree National Park. In this part of the state where the land is basically desert and doesn’t naturally support growth of anything substantial lies vast swaths of land that is developed for industrial agriculture that feeds on the water of Hetch Hetchy. This water is transported almost 400 miles to grow food for over burgeoning populations. Not forgetting of course the use of large amount of  pesticides and chemical fertilizers. In the space of 2 weeks I was seeing the water at both ends of it’s journey. From the crystal clear fresh snow melt waters of Yosemite’s majestic Tuolomne River that roars through granite canyons until the O’Shaughnessy dam disturbs it’s flow, to the fields of unnatural food and industrial farms that defy nature. The result of which unless we change our ways will ultimately defy us. If we have lost our connection to the basic things that sustain us, food and water, and we fail to understand that they are not to be taken for granted and not to be manipulated in ways that are not sustainable then soon it will all backfire on us. For thinking we’re pretty smart we can be awfully stupid as well.

These pictures were taken on a 4 day hike on the weekend of June 13th 2009 into the backcountry of the Yosemite wilderness. we went into an area called Jack Main Canyon and our final destination a place called Wilma lake. We covered a total of 46 miles round trip starting at 3815ft and reaching just under 8000ft at Wilma. Many areas were water logged as we were still in melt run off season. Twice I had to wade in water and there was plenty of bushwacking.  The toughest part of it was climbing out of the mouth of the canyon on the way back out. The first night at Backpackers campsite was marked with what I thought was a strobe light going off in my face and then realizing no I was not in the studio anymore. That was a nice bolt of lightning. 3 seconds later it was followed with one huge crack of thunder right over our heads. I turned to my backcountry partner and gave him a little smile. Despite it’s obvious danger in the mountains I do get excited sometime by a darn good electrical storm. It’s the elements. Mother Nature doing her thing. The storm clouds lingered for the whole entire time we were there, menacingly overhead, but the storm never came. The rain began to drizzle down on our last day when we were only just a mile from our exit from the wilderness.

No bears at all on this trip which has to be the first trip in a long long time into Yosemite that I have not seen a bear somewhere. Managed some twilight visits from deer to our camp though. One was a big guy with horns and he wasn’t shy. He looked rather stately. The mozzies were present in large numbers as they usually are this time of year but fortunately my friend had remembered the repellent and we managed to empty the bottle.

There isn’t much that a walk into the wilderness of the Sierra Nevada can’t do for me. It challenges me on all levels and gives me the space, solace and comfort to think about who I am, what I want out of my life and how I want the planet to be and finally to accept everything that comes my way no matter how it comes. It revitalizes and it inspires. When I walk in nature, nature walks in me and life is good.

My word this is a long post.

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June 22nd, 2009

monocle and me

When I got the call one day in April from London to shoot for Monocle, I jumped all over it. Yes I’d been waiting for them to call for a while. It was one of those ” can you shoot it for us tomorrow and have the pics for us to look at in London the following morning”. Seems like there’s a lot of that in publishing. The job required me to plain and simple go and shoot the new terminal at Mineta San Jose Intl Airport here in California. The photo editor was expecting a nice brand spanking new terminal and what I found was a half finished construction site. I had to pick my way around some angles to disguise it, make it look all shiny and new. I think I managed alright except when I quite deliberately didn’t try to. I donned a hard hat and a bright orange jacket given to be by the those in charge and off I went around the place free to roam. The thing that bugged me about this building was the failure to implement any solar panels in the design. For a city that gets on average 300 days of sunshine a year I thought that was quite odd and more than a little annoying. Here’s the article and a few of my outtakes.

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June 19th, 2009

baring it all

Welcome dear visitor to MMC’s proper job blog. Yes and here we go with yet another photographer doing another god damn blog. Who the hell has got time for all this anyway? I think the secret is to not waste anyone’s time here. Neither yours nor mine.  So let’s get moving.

Photography is a huge part of my life but it is not the only part of my life so this blog will not be about photography all of the time.  It’s just a tool that I use to give a louder voice to the other things I’m preoccupied with. I suppose that is what artists are. People using tools to make themselves heard because sometimes we need louder voices to emphasize the things we think and care about. Photography is a passion and again it is not my only one. The one thing I will say about it is that it has for the past 15 years always been with me and I suspect always will. This blog just like photography is going to be another tool to illustrate the things going on around me that keep me going from one day to the next.

I mulled over what I would write about as an introductory sort of spiel and then well I gave up, said sod that. I’m going to share some photos with you, self portraits in fact that I tackled in the last couple of months. Self portraiture and the Nude are two areas that I felt I have sort of neglected and they were areas I wanted to investigate. I ended up doing these pictures 3 weeks apart and they both sort of just happened spur of the moment. I shot them because the light prompted me to do so and there was no one else around to grab except me. However they are very personal explorations and ones I felt I had to do. Turning the camera on oneself can be quite humbling. I figure if I put others through it that I should at least say I’ve done it to myself too. I may not get this personal again.

My Sunday SelfSonoma Self

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