“The reason that I keep writing is that all my most powerful messages about the fates of wild places that I care about need to have words as well as images.” – Galen Rowell
A wilderness photographer, climber and writer, Rowell was born on Aug. 23, 1940
and died in 2002 after devoting his final 30 years to photographing and
writing about the world’s wild places. In the process, he won the Ansel Adams Award
for Conservation Photography and established his own lasting legacy.
He was held in equal high regard for
his writing on photography and on
humanitarian and environmental issues and mountaineering. His remarkable 18 books included In the
Throne Room of the Mountain Gods about the history of mountaineering on the
Himalayan mountain K2, and Mountain Light: In Search of the Dynamic
Landscape, one of the best selling “how-to” photo books of all time.
In addition to his many photo shoots and articles for such
prestigious journals as Life, National Geographic, and Outdoor
Photographer, he also produced myriad stand-alone shots. “Luckily,” he once said, “people tell me
how they have had a particular landscape photograph of mine in their office or
bedroom for 15 years and it always speaks to them strongly whenever they see
it.”
When asked his secret to photographic
success, he said it was recognizing how film sees the world differently than
the human eye and adjusting his shooting techniques to fit. “Sometimes those differences can make a
photograph more powerful than what you actually observed. It’s remarkable.”
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