In 2016 Wildlife Photographer of the Year and Looking at Flowers through a Macro Lens we spoke about great photographers of the wild, people should come to know, like , Leanne Cole, Dan Frugalberg, Pete Hillman, Gideon Knight, Cindy Knoke, Tim Laman, Rabirius, and Purple Rays (Jonathan Udo Ndah). They all bring a different touch on the way we can look at nature. Rabirius even dares to bring his own graphic mastering to change the real view, giving it an other dimension.
Those photographers show how while other’s thrive in the social whirl, a nature’s soul will find depth of meaning {Nature’s Soul~} or may explore the relationship between nature and civilisation (like for example A Book Of Animals by Rabirius).
Even when we do have to find a small window of existence, those people have the magic touch on their fingers to show us the beauty of god’s universe. In such beautiful area the Divine Creator has given to mankind, in Bragg Creek, Alberta near both the prairies and the mountains lives also a photographer we would like to introduce to you.
Christopher Martin has an artistic background, having grown up painting and sketching. Following university, he studied Chinese painting in Taiwan. His interested in the photographic medium came around 2000 and that has been his primary artistic direction for the past 10+ years which is not bad for us who can enjoy his third eye with which he allows himself to play with reality, to share it as he sees it or to create a version of it through long exposure, wide angles or motion blurs. The freedom he has to photograph in so many different ways feeds his creativity and helps to drive his enthusiasm to create art.
His photography has been recognized in contests run by National Geographic, Urban Photographer of the Year, Photo District News, Photolife Magazine, Travel Photographer of the Year, World Photography Organization, Photofocus, Photography Masters Cup and others. If you are interested in seeing a summary of some of these awards, please visit this page.
It is the city man, Arte Wolfe who inspires him. That son of commercial artists who graduated from the University of Washington with Bachelor’s degrees in fine arts and art education in 1975, has made in the short time of his photography career a remarkable testament to the durability and demand for his images, his expertise, and his passionate advocacy for the environment and indigenous culture, working on every continent, in hundreds of locations, and on a dazzling array of projects, making it possible for us to travel with him in our dreams. No wonder some of the world’s top magazines such as National Geographic, Smithsonian, Audubon, GEO, and Terre Sauvage wanted to offer their readers the magical view of this artist.
An other source of inspiration for christopher Martin came from the Vietnam University College of Art and studied with Long Chin-San in Taiwan before he fled by boat and came as a refugee to the United States where he resides completely within a Chinese community. Mr. Don Hong-Oai Bio got recognised at the Ansel Adams Gallery, Yosemite National Park, California in 1994 and got awards from the International Federation of Photographic Art, Switzerland and from the Chinatown Photographic Society.
Paul Nicklen, a globally acclaimed, Canadian-born photographer and marine biologist,and also a ildlife Photographer of the Year Competition winner, was the other influencer for Martin. That Canadian photographer has been documenting both the beauty and the plight of our planet’s polar regions and our world’s oceans for over twenty years. In Europe his work is known by us mostly from the National Geographic Magazine. But he is also the is the recipient of more than thirty international awards, including the Natural Resources Defense Council’s BioGems Visionary Award for his material of several years showing the world how we need to be careful about the use of fossils, not to destroy the arctic. Born and raised on Baffin Island, Nunavut, grown up in one of the only non-Inuit families in a tiny native settlement amid the ice fields of Northern Canada, he is the right man to show how not only the Inuit are endangered but an entire animal-world. for us clearly also a photographer to follow and to see how he as a founder and contributing photographer to SeaLegacy, can work out his plans on dedicating his efforts to shining a light into the issues, species, and ecosystems he so deeply cares about.
His photography book Polar Obsession captures up-close documentation of the lives of leopard seals, whales, walruses, polar bears, bearded seals, and narwhals, and gives a vivid portrait of two extraordinary, endangered ecosystems.
Based in the beautiful countryside of North Wales Mike Hardisty is an other artist who catches our eye in 2016, the year he has been trialling some new photography software ACDSee Ultimate and PhotoMatix {Llangelynin–A Very Small Church}. For him landscape photography forms a very important part of my life and capturing the ever changing scenery gives me a sense of discovery. For him, photography in the mountains or on the coast, experiencing changing light and weather conditions, is a continuous learning process and gives him the freedom to think and live.
For those who are stuck in a city and think there can not be a place for some green and colours they also should hear Chicago’s motto which is
Urbs Horto, or City in a Garden.
Given the amount of sprawl and environmental damage that’s occurred since its founding, the blog we like to introduce would find it hard to argue that Chicago is still a city in a garden. However, they can still have a garden in the city.
Jason gardens in Evanston, Illinois (zone 5), about one mile from the border with Chicago.
Jason Bertkay lives with his spouse, Judy, and has two grown sons. Judy, is in charge of photographs, while Jason is in charge of plants. They also motor down the Skyline Drive in Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains,a.o..
We also can find a team of a mother, retired biology professor – former biology major, nurse daughter and blogger who can offer us some nice pictures. Even though the landscape looks (and feels) arid, southern Arizona seems to be a mecca for butterflies, perhaps because of the diversity of vegetation and flowers there, and they are able to have us enjoy those and many other animals and flowers in their region.
An other photographer who let us look often at his front and rear gardens is Pete Hillman, whom we mentioned already in earlier posts. Photography is his main hobby, but he does know to use a good eye and can give us close-ups of things most people even do not notice when walking around. He knows the way of recording the beauty and wonders he discovers within nature. Most of the species found on his site were observed in the county of Staffordshire, England, where he lives, whilst others are from around various locations in the UK.
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From the road we also get lovely pictures from Rebecca Gillum. She knows the limitations of life and is content but is able to catch that moment in time and to present it for eternity. {So I Like Best of All Autumn} In her life she want to be willing
to be dazzled — to cast aside the weight of facts, and like Mary Oliver maybe even
to float a little above this difficult world. {To Be Dazzled}
We hope you too may be dazzled finding such nice photographs. Whilst the animals may have a well-defined hunting ground that the photographers are familiar with, they shall need patience to catch it, enabling to place that magic they saw in a moment for us to discover on a two dimensional plate.
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Please do find to read
Get the lenses out to getting closer again
Looking at Flowers through a Macro Lens
2016 Wildlife Photographer of the Year
8 Reasons We’re Looking Forward to Springtime Photography
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Find the interesting sites
- Cindy Knoke + on Pinterest
- Rabirius whom you also can follow on Pinterest
- Don Hong-Oai Bio
- Christopher Martin
- Art Wolfe
- Paul Nicklen
- Say It With A Camera – Mike Hardisty
- Garden in a city
- Rebecca Gillum
- Back yard biology
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Further reading
- In My Own Words Weekly Photo Challenge- Tiny
- Photography Journal Blog Weekly Photo Challenge- Tiny
- Weekly Photo Challenge – Small on Tiny – Celina2609’s Blog
- Our Own Little Walk of Fame – Aggie’s Amygdala
- Say Tiny! – Blog of Hammad Rais
- thephotoseye Tiny Thrills
- Another Tiny View – Rebecca Wiseman Portfolio
- Miss Jerz-tucky Weekly Photo Challenge- Tiny
- Words Like Honey Weekly Photo Challenge- Tiny
- deetravelssite.wordpress.com Tiny
- This is Another Story Color Transformation
- From Egg to Sheer Beauty – Micks Blog
- Doug Couvillion’s Photo Blog Weekly Photo Challenge- Transmogrify
- Sea Play Photography Weekly Challenge- Transmogrify
- XingfuMama My little pumpkins don’t do scary
- Crafting Photolog Weekly Photo Challenge- Transmogrify
- Mataro Photographs Halloween Transmogrification
- Nature & Travel Photos WPC – Transmogrify
- Let the Images Speak Transmogrify
- The Land Slide Photography Time
- Mr. Finch
- Photographs from the Edge- Review
- On the Hunt
- Take Away
- A Twist of Moss
- DX vs. FX cameras for wildlife photography
- Breaking It Down
- Of Fairytales
- butterflies in the desert?
- An Alien World #2
- Land of Lilliput
- Common Greenshield Lichen
- Pawpaw Sphinx
- This Way and That
- Charming smile
- Birds of the Texas Gulf Coast – Common Nighthawk
- Great Horned Owl
- Friday’s Frenzied Flights
- “I’ve Got To Tell Everybody About This!”
- Limb with a View
- Caribou in Newfoundland
- Even More Jelly ear
- Golden Tanager (Tangara arthus)
- A photographer’s eagle eye
- Into the Sunset
- A Dazzle of Zebra, a Journey of Giraffe and a Crash of Rhino
- Best Camera Trap Captures – October 2016
- Camdeboo – The Green Valley In The Great Thirstland
- Up Close!
- Pure Magnificence
- Octoberfest 2016
- Wild November Sky
- Along the Rio Grande
- Fotografare animali selvatici con TriggerSmart
- One Left For The squirrels
- A Highland Cow
- Wings
- Beautiful Bracken
- Birds at the British Wildlife Centre
- Supermoon
- Supermoon #2
- Drones and Machine Learning Combine to identify, protect endangered sea cows
- Male Kestrel
- Riverside
- First Snow of the Season
- Muddy Ibis
- Hiding Place
- Tiny
- Crazy Legs
- Weekly Photo Challenge: Tiny
- Photographer Tim Plowden gets up close and personal with forest creatures
- In the presence of greatness
- Magpie
- About Mites And Ticks
- About Grasses, Sedges And Rushes
- Swallow
- Tiny friends
- Junco Junkie
- Dark Eye with a Catchlight
- This Beautiful Bird
- Bulrush
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