L I N D E W A I D H O F E R / E S S A Y S |
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ICONIC LANDSCAPES
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< ICONIC LANDSCAPES > OTHER PATAGONIAS |
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My response was classic: investigate, explore, and return again and again, each visit deepening the way I looked at these swirling fins and crevasses of subterranean rock, and changing the way I was able to photograph them. The sinuous, twisting, slot-canyon, sculpture garden that was Antelope canyon kept me hooked for years. Once you stumble on such an iconic landscape, you have to come back. Your photographs are good, but not yet good enough. With each visit the latent image of this mysterious landscape that you carry inside you becomes clearer, sharper, truer. Finally with enough work and enough images, you have made it you own. The fascination doesn’t go away, but somehow the obsession is tamed. The urgency needed to wrestle with the elements of that place is reduced. This iconic landscape you fell in love with is still other-worldly but that “other world” has become your world. And then?... Nothing, it seems, lasts forever. Landscapes too, even the strangest and most powerful, landscape can grow tired, predictable and ultimately repetitive after being photographed by hundreds of photographers. Even such iconic landscapes. This, I suppose, is the price we pay for loving them, and photographing them too hard, too much. And just how many such personal discoveries should a photographer hope for? Encountering one fresh iconic landscape is already a lot. Twenty years after my first visits to the slot canyons near Page Arizona, and then the eroded fantasies of Coyote Buttes, I found myself wondering if I would ever find any other virgin mysterious landscape that would move me quite as much, any other fresh new place that would so completely capture my photographer’s imagination... Against all odds I did. |
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How far south? Central Patagonia. 47 degrees south. Six and a half hours drive from the nearest city, far enough. Far enough to seem like a real destination. Or sometimes a pilgrimage. Lago Carrera in Chile (across the Argentine border to the east it is called Lago Buenos Aires) is the second largest lake in South America (after Lake Titicaca). It is a shinning sweep of turquoise water, arcing from glaciers and icefields on the west to vast pampas on the east; fed by melting glaciers so the water level can vary more than a meter at different times of year. And not quite a wilderness, although definitely a frontier. Puerto Tranquilo is tiny town at the northwest corner of this lake. Think Big Sur in 1900. The locals have discovered that they can make some extra pesos guiding visitors to see the cavernas de mármol, the marble caverns, in small boats. Pedro Contreras and his son Jony, are the masters of this guiding game. Jony is a subtle artist with the outboard motor on his small boat or bote. He delights in easing the boat into tight slots, under low roofs, and around columns. Patience itself; he holds his small boat motionless, suspended over transparent turquoise gulfs, as long as you want, as long as you need. Hour after hour. And you really do need time, and patience, and persistence to make friends with this watery blue landscape. I’ve found the marble caverns of Lago Carrera to be amazingly analagous, although strikingly different from the slot canyons of Arizona. They are also caverns of living light—bouncing, reflecting, echoing light. But the light itself, the color of this light is 180 degrees from the glowing warmth of a desert sun striking desert rocks. The marble caverns are a private world of cool blues. Many blues. Shimmering, trembling, echoing blues, blue-greens, turquoise and teal and cyan. Light trapped inside the glacial melt water, under the water, and rippling and reflecting off grey and white veined marble. Pure marble hollowed out by centuries of water-level wave action. But just as in the slot canyons, light that refuses to stay still, always moving and dancing.… |
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W E S T E R N E Y E / L I N D E W A I D H O F E R Box 2, Crestone Colorado 81131 USA phone / fax 719 256 4337 © 2008 Linde Waidhofer. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.
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