SUNDANCE: Artist In Residence
by Robert Glenn Ketchum
From 1987-1989, Robert Redford invited me to become the first visual Artist-In-Residence at his newly established Sundance Institute, part of the community he was building around his recently purchased ski resort in Utah. The residency provided me with subject matter that produced some of the most significant images of my career, but importantly, it also afforded me my first aerial work, a platform that would become increasingly important throughout my life. A limited amount of these images were ever published, and NONE of the aerials ever were. The best will now appear, please enjoy! ~Robert Glenn Ketchum
From 1987-1989, Robert Redford invited me to become the first visual Artist-In-Residence at his newly established Sundance Institute, part of the community he was building around his recently purchased ski resort in Utah. The residency provided me with subject matter that produced some of the most significant images of my career, but importantly, it also afforded me my first aerial work, a platform that would become increasingly important throughout my life. A limited amount of these images were ever published, and NONE of the aerials ever were. The best will now appear, please enjoy! ~Robert Glenn Ketchum
Thursday, June 11, 2020
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RobertGKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, June 4, 2020
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RobertGKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, May 28, 2020
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Thursday, May 21, 2020
Sundance #97 Over hill and dale.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RobertGKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, May 14, 2020
Sundance #96 OMG!!!!!
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RobertGKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, May 7, 2020
Sundance #95
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Thursday, April 30, 2020
Sundance #94: Cosmic spotlight.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RobertGKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, April 23, 2020
Sundance #93: So much for the quietude of the “winter break.” Now, let’s get back to the rage of fall. Everything you have seen of the fall so far in this blog, has been from a ground level viewpoint, but after my winter helicopter flight, I was eager to see what fall looked like from the air, and my generous benefactor, Robert Redford, was happy to, once again, accommodate me, and provide several more opportunities to fly. On one of these days, we have had some broken weather, with intermittent rain, but visibility is good, and my pilot just avoids storm cells that looked dangerous. To my benefit, that broken weather streams bright sunlight through holes between the clouds, lighting up select parts of the landscape, while sweeping across it like a spotlight beam. The visuals of this are striking through the lens, but even the pilot says he was glad to be flying, because it is such a beautiful day to be doing so.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RobertGKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, April 16, 2020
Sundance #92: To rise to the summit of Mount Timpanogos (nearly 12,000ft) the helicopter in which I am flying must take the ascent more gradually because of the thinner, high altitude air. As a result, when we leave the Sundance resort, we fly up North Fork Canyon, past Redford’s ranch, and Aspen Grove, the Brigham Young University retreat and conference facilities, then slowly begin to climb up along the terraced basins. When we finally achieve the summit view, I can more fully understand the complexity of the Timpanogos massif. There is only one “tallest” summit, but there are several other summits that are nearly the same height. ALL of them have been carved by glaciers and support amphitheater-like basin, often descending down several sides of the peak. Some tier down onto the side of the resort, others pitch off into the Provo-Salt Lake side of the mountain, giving Timpanogos many “faces” that loom above the valleys below. Most of these summits are connected to each other by ridgelines, and as I will eventually learn, there are trails that follow these ridgelines to take hikers to the multiple peaks. Timpanogos is at the southernmost part of the Wasatch Range, but it stands alone, as just one huge mountain complex,..truly unique to see from my elevated overview.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RobertGKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, April 9, 2020
Sundance #91: On my winter helicopter flight above Sundance resort and Mount Timpanagos, the views are spectacular because it is a clear day, but it takes a while for the copter to achieve the nearly 12,000ft. elevation because the air is thinner and the copter rotor blades have less lift. The slow transition to the higher summits is just fine, though, because there is so much to see, and I am in no hurry to be anywhere else. It is also interesting for me to see this world buried beneath the snow, because now the emphasis is on the geologic forms of the basins as they rise, one after another, up to the summit. In any other season there would be lakes, meadows, hanging gardens, and profuse wildflowers to be observed, but now all those distractions are gone. What becomes clear is how rugged and fortress-like Timpanogos is. The Native Americans who inhabited this area were right, this IS a sacred mountain,..a mountain of power.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RobertGKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, April 2, 2020
Sundance #90: Our ascending flight up the slopes of Mount Timpanagos finally hits the sheer walls of the upper basins, and in an area known for deep, steep powder skiing, such as Snowbird, on the west face of the Wasatch Range, there is always tremendous avalanche danger in the upper chutes. The Sundance side of the mountain does not collect as much snow, but nonetheless, our flight passes over many small slab avalanches, and our rotor noise actually sets some off.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RobertGKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, March 26, 2020
Sundance #89: After shooting some aerials of the Sundance ski resort area, the pilot and I take a short tour of the high basins of Mount Timpanogos. He has to work our way up to the higher elevations, and as he does, I gaze down on what would be the benches and terraces through which the summer hiking trails bring people up into the hanging gardens. Most of the rock is buried, as are the gardens, but the benches are outlined by stands of trees, and present themselves almost in a staircase fashion (if you could take giant steps).
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, March 19, 2020
Sundance #88: Lately, this blog has strobed you with fall colors and few words, until the last 4 posts when I went on a rant about air quality and voter responsibility. I thought now I would just switch gears completely, and take you somewhere else. One day in the winter, Sundance ski resort brought in a helicopter so that I could fly above the ski area and take pictures. Of the many images I have been showing you, the few resort images I take that day are the ones most “used.” However, not to miss the chance of the helicopter’s view point of everything, I ask of we can remove the door, and fly about the upper basins of Mt. Timpanogos, as well, and all agree that would be fine. Thus, on a VERY cold and clear morning, I lift off, make several passes over the resort base area, and principle slopes of the ski mountain, and then we fly up to have a look at the summit slopes. Enjoy this world of “quiet” white for the next few posts.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, March 12, 2020
Sundance #87: With regard to the air pollution in the Great Salt Lake basin on inversion days in the winter (last two posts), some days are bad, some days are worse,..and then there are days like this. This is as bad, or worse, than anything I ever saw in Beijing or Shanghai, and WAY worse than ANY day I ever have seen as a lifelong resident of Los Angeles. You would hardly even know that the mountains are there. Are you kidding me? Why does ANY population of human beings allow this to be done to them? This is one of the most unhealthful conditions you might ever breathe in? It makes smoking cigarettes look benign by comparison. For those of you that have families living through this, your lives are being shortened, your health costs are going to be greater as you get older, and your being f*%#ed by a state and national political agenda that is trying to roll back air quality regulations, and those on car emissions as well. Growing up in LA, I played soccer on bad smog days, and needed to go to the infirmary after our 3hr. practices (many of us did). The citizens of LA then realized NO ONE wanted to live with those conditions, and they began to regulate factory, car, and cargo boat emissions. Things actually got better, even though LA became more crowded. We still have smog, BUT we are also working to improve that as best the politic body will allow us, which at this moment, it is not only doing NOTHING, it is trying to REDUCE restrictions. It seems a clever trap,..make people more sickly by de-regulating environmental restrictions, and make more money off of them by raising their insurance. I don't know about the rest of you, but I have a son and a daughter that I refuse to condemn to a world that looks like this. I will DEFINITELY be voting, as will they, and my friends that don’t vote are likely not going to be my friends any longer. Let’s take the quality of our lives back from this disgraceful, corporate-greed influenced government.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, March 5, 2020
Sundance #86: In my last post, I said that the poor air quality cannot be entirely blamed on the smokestack industries of the Great Salt Lake basin, the amount of car and truck traffic that passes through also contributes. Interstate #15 in one of the most important transportation corridors in the entire state, and it passes right through the center of the basin. On REALLY cold days when there is an inversion with little wind to move anything around, from the hillsides above Provo, and most likely from any upslope on the west side of the Wasatch Range, you can see the variations in air pollution concentrations quite clearly. Close to the foothills, it is the least present. Over the city centers of Provo and Salt Lake, it is more concentrated and the air is cloudier. Most strikingly, the worst air appears like a line passing through, and that line follows Interstate #15 precisely. Whatever is being emitted by all those cars and trucks is stalled in a stagnant layer directly above the highway, and it is visually more dense than any of the other layers around it. I saw this phenomenon in Shanghai also, where the freeway systems pass through high-rise office and housing complexes that create “canyons” which trap all of the car pollution, directly above the roadway. If you exit the freeway, and drive surface streets away from the freeway system, you can literally see the air quality improve (slightly). It is sad so many people live with these conditions and put up with it, because it is a death sentence for your lungs, and an established fact that it shortens your life. Don’t let your community become a victim of the EPA rolling back air quality controls. Get out and vote to protect yourself, and your family. A HEALTHY environment makes America great again.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, February 27, 2020
Sundance #85: The Great Salt Lake basin hosts quite few smokestack industries in Salt Lake, Provo, and the highway stretch in-between. Most of them emit pollution in one way or the other, and when there is a weather inversion, warmer air above, traps the pollutants in the colder air below, creating smog conditions in the valley that rival the HORRIBLE air quality of Beijing and Shanghai. The industry shown above is located near the lakeshore in Provo, which I am sure is probably not great for the lake either. To be fair, though, these loosely regulated industries are not the only ones to blame. The traffic on Interstate #15, which connects both cities and plies the length of the state, contributes as well, especially the constant 18-wheel track traffic. Having grown up in smoggy LA, before there were significant air pollution regulations, I know that cities generate unhealthy air quality by the nature of their congestion, but it always seemed strange to me to be at Sundance resort, and at the foot of the remarkable Wasatch Range, and then experience smoggy days so dense you could barely see to drive. I don’t know about you, but I am glad that there are air pollution regulations. I spent time in Chinese cities over the last 35yrs. when the air quality was so bad I never left the hotel, and people who were out, were ALL wearing masks. Do you want to live like that? Do you want your children to play sports and be out-of-doors in these kinds of conditions? If your answer is NO, then vote that way, and stop our current political body from rolling back EPA air quality standards. Not even the car companies agree with that idea!
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, February 20, 2020
Sundance #84: I am standing on a hill above the Provo River Canyon that leads from Provo to the Heber Valley and Sundance Resort. As you saw in my last two previous posts, Sundance and the valley experience some shockingly bad air quality because smog from the Great Salt Lake basin (in the distance) “leeks” around the Wasatch Range onto their side of the mountain, and this gap is one of those leek points. This view also encapsulates some of the issues that create the smoggy conditions. In the name of “jobs,” Provo and Salt Lake City willingly host some loosely regulated smokestack industries, as you can see here in the distance (that is Provo). These communities are also part of the Interstate 15 corridor, that is one of the nation’s busiest, and through which innumerable 18-wheel transports pass on a daily basis. In both winter and summer, this huge basin regularly has an “inversion,” when a layer of warm air traps a layer of cooler air close to the ground. During such an inversion, it also traps all of the air-born pollutants, creating a smog blanket equal to some of the most polluted cities on the planet. Do we, the public, really want to see the EPA rollback our air quality standards, which they are doing with the blessing of this current administration? It is your children that will have the lung cancer. When you vote (if you even vote,..sad), stop voting for a person, and vote for their policies (as fully demonstrated over the last 4yrs.) Vote FOR your lives, your children’s lives, the overall community health, as well as that of the planet that supports our lives. After all this bulls*$% about health care and insurance, I have two kids, and if you think your insurance has gotten cheaper, and your coverage has improved, your not actually reading your policies and paying your bills. Medical costs are still going up. Drug costs are still going up. MY insurance has gotten more expensive in EACH of the last 4yrs., and then I took 3 cuts in my Medicare payments. Now they are proposing to cut my/our Social Security Benefits, which WE have paid into for our entire lifetimes. Is this really what you want for your future wellbeing and financial survival?
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, February 13, 2020
Sundance #83: At Sundance, the invasion of smog from the Great Salt Lake basin on hot summer days not only occludes your breathing, but also the view. On days like this, I tried to stay indoors as much as possible, but when they arrived, they were visually so shocking, I often went out early and/or late in the day to make images like this as a record. Robert Redford allowed that I would have no “agenda” during my Artist-In-Residence at Sundance, but my pro-environmental defense of our planetary home seems to kick in anytime I am working, and I could not, NOT take pictures of this horrible haze-of-death when it appeared. In many of my pictures in this portfolio, I have used the fall hillsides, the early morning light blowing-up the colors, and the distant view, to create some dramatic, color-raging images, so this shot was irresistible because it is just the opposite. At a time when our president and HIS EPA have turned on the health of our people, and they are pressing to de-regulate the very laws that have helped correct this kind of urban air pollution, is this what you really want for your children - to have our cities look like Beijing, and our children playing soccer and football, while breathing this in? If not, you better step up and do something about it, because whether you like him or not, the collective politic is selling the public health down the river as I write this.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, February 6, 2020
Sundance #82: Previously in this blog, I point out that Redford offered me this Artist-In-Residence without an agenda attached. He just wanted me to enjoy the environment of Sundance, and to take pictures without feeling there was some political purpose I needed to address, which is MOSTLY what I did. However, from my first major commission to photograph the Hudson River Valley, I “woke” to realize the larger view of the world included things besides the undisturbed, natural landscape. This was also true at Sundance, and it made its presence felt in VERY undeniable ways, the most significant of which was the smog that invaded from the Salt Lake City-Provo side of the mountain. I grew up in the 60’s in Los Angeles, and played soccer in high school on days that were SO smoggy, many of us went to the infirmary after practice to breath oxygen. I also spent 35yrs. in the UCLA-China Exchange Program, and I know the air of Shanghai and Beijing to be some of the most polluted I have ever experienced, but the Great Salt Lake basin is not far behind, and remarkably, with WAY fewer cars and people. Part of that is because the basin is a smog trap by configuration of the landscape, and also because there is A LOT of smokestack industry, and others, that face little regulation, because “they provide important jobs.” During inversion days in mid-winter, and especially during hot and humid days during the summer, when the smog pollution hits what we in LA call ”an alert stage," this is what it looks like at Sundance. In this image, it is early on an already hot morning, and I am standing on a hilltop, looking down on the Deer Creek Reservoir and the Heber Valley. There is the ENTIRE Wasatch Mountain Range between my location and the Great Salt Lake basin, but this air pollution has “leaked” into the Heber Valley, by seeping around the edges of the range, south at Provo Canyon, and north at Park City.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, January 30, 2020
Sundance #81: “Lost In Thought.” Printed at 48” x 65” is quite mind-boggling.
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Thursday, January 23, 2020
Sundance #80: “Forest Heart,” one of my favorite 30”x 40” cibachrome prints (there are a few still available) - LOL!
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Thursday, January 16, 2020
Sundance #79: "Abandon All Hope, Ye Who Enter Here” - “Lasciate Ogne Speranza, Voi Ch’intrate"
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Thursday, January 9, 2020
Sundance #78: It pays to get up early and go out.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2020, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, January 2, 2020
Sundance #77
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Thursday, December 26, 2019
Sundance #76: WTF?
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Thursday, December 19, 2019
Sundance #75
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Thursday, December 12, 2019
Sundance #74: Mooooooo!
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Thursday, December 5, 2019
Sundance #73: At this point in my Sundance Artist-In-Residence blog, I have described the resort of the surrounding varied environments in depth, and I have even proffered a few technical photographic suggestions, and provided some insights about composition. It seems now there is little else to do, and yet there is an abundance of imagery still worth viewing. So, I am going to say less, if anything at all, and just post the images for you to enjoy. In leaving the verbiage aside, I will remind you, this was all shot on transparency film with medium format cameras, and WELL BEFORE digital, and Adobe, arrived. What you see, is what was there, and quite an amzing world it is. Enjoy!
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Thursday, November 28, 2019
Sundance #72: As I explained in the last post, when I took this picture, I did so because I was attracted, not only to the varied coloration, but the astounding display of textures. As a consequence, I thought the image might make for an excellent embroidery subject, working with the Chinese guild, with whom I had been collaborating since 1985, through the UCLA-China Exchange program. I was correct in thinking they would agree to rendering this subject, and above you see it in process, on a workbench at the institute. The matrix into which the embroidery stitches are sewn, is a pale blue color that will be allowed to remain without any stitches in the top, left-hand corner, above the distant summit. At the moment of this picture, most of the embroidery of the hillside has been completed, using some 16 different stitch styles. The distant summit has the first layer of “crossing” stitches completed, but there is more detail to be added there. The unstiched sky will remain blank, and will utilize a technique I introduced to our embroidery productions. A painted background will be inserted behind the embroidery in framing, AND it will be set back in the frame. The paint will be mottled, giving the sky some variation, eluding to clouds, and because of the set back, when the piece is illuminated on display, there will be a slight cast shadow, creating further dimensional relief between the summit and the sky.
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Thursday, November 21, 2019
Sundance #71: Since I have been discussing the ways in which you create a greater sense of dimension in a photograph (last two posts), this takes “the tree in the foreground” to the extreme. I stick an entire hillside in here. I make numerous compositional variations of this subject because I am fascinated by the colors and textural relief, but in review, they seem too flat, and too obvious. This entire hillside is crawling with texture variations, and the more they are emphasized the better, as far as I am concerned. Backing off enough to include the distant summit, and indeed, the contrasting weather, and weather color, truly sets the hillside apart from the close-up, more compressed compositions. As I hope you know, I spent 35yrs. in China, collaborating with a premier embroidery guild to translate many of my images into textiles. (If you don’t know this, read about in the following blog. Because I saw SO much textural relief in this picture, I decide to bring it to the guild as a suggestion, and they also like the idea. It is ultimately translated into an embroidery, as you will see in next week’s post.
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Thursday, November 14, 2019
Sundance #70: In the last post, I spoke about using devices such as framing to create dimensions within a composition, and it was exemplified by a tree offsetting a background hillside, taken on the opposite side of the Provo River Canyon from the location of Sundance. Crossing back to the Sundance / North Fork location, I have created a similar image, quite literally, in Redford’s driveway. During my Artist-in-Residence at Sundance, I had the VERY GOOD fortune to occasionally stay in the guest house of Redford’s ranch home, and often walked about the property to take pictures, as it afforded remarkable views in every direction. That driveway can be clearly seen in the winter season, banner photograph, that signatures this blog. In the distance of that image, you can see a section of the Mt. Timpanogos massif referred to as Elk Point. Elk Point is in direct view of both the ranch, and the guest house, and on the fall day depicted above, Elk Point is aglow with fall colors. I arise for a pre-dawn walk about the grounds, thinking I might get a great sunrise picture. However, as it comes up, there are some low clouds that partially obscure it. Nonetheless, they create a bright rosette horizon. At that moment, I am standing near one of the horse pastures, and I see that the reddening sky is turning the grasses in the field a pinkish hue, which seems to be growing more intense. Immediately, I start walking to change my position, because I know in the reverse view, this radiance might color Mt. Timpanogos, and it does. My first images are of the summit as it begins to light up, but while the pink glow slowly crawls down the face, I keep walking toward it, reaching the road near the guest house, which offers up the above POV. This is a shoulder of Elk Point. It is not truly in direct sun as yet, but it IS being illuminated by the ambient red of the sunrise, which in turn, has set off warm tones in the landscape, and in particular, the reds of the trees. The immediate foreground is still in shadow, so I use the dark evergreen tree as my compositional foreground device, to give the otherwise flat relief in the picture some 3-D. This is NOT photoshopped! This is just what the actual lighting at the time, offered my Fuji transparency film.
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Thursday, November 7, 2019
Sundance #69: Driving around in the rain on USFS dirt roads above Bear Canyon, you see in the last several posts that I am struck by the vertical walls of fall color through, which the road passes. In the examples posted thus far, I have been using the steep terrain as an abstract canvas, allowing the entire frame of the picture to be my subject. Those same steep canyons and hillsides, also lend themselves quite nicely to a more traditional landscape photography POV, which I play with here. To create depth in a painting, or photograph, artists often use what is termed a “framing” device - the placement of something in the foreground intended to emphasize distance between the device, and the more distant background. The above image is a variation of that. The flaming tree withe the black trunk is my foreground device. The AMAZING hillside is my background, and by working in the rain, I have added “atmosphere” as a further illusion of distance. Italian Renaissance painters created atmosphere by painting from the background, forward, and as the painting progressed, they would brush a pale blue wash, across the entire canvas, building hazy layers of blue over each layer of the landscape they painted, until they reached the foreground objects. The term for this technique is “sfumato,” and Leonardo da Vinci used this application quite frequently. I have enhanced this image further by including a bit of the USFS road, plunging through the trees, in the middle-ground, and I have caused the colors to subtly “pop” more than they might, by allowing the rain-soaked, and thus deep-black tree trunk, as a foil, causing the eye to see the colors as “brighter.” Hope you have fun with all that. I certainly did!
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Thursday, October 31, 2019
Sundance #68: Again, no Adobe tricks here, this place just looks like this. Back driving the USFS dirt roads that rise to the east of Provo Canyon, I have my mentor, Eliot Porter, to thank for helping me to understand how the camera and film can best record optimal color. In the above image, a peak fall color explosion, has been saturated by hours of rain, and the bright overcast sky is lighting up the landscape without any highlights or shadows. Boom! Amazingly, and I am sorry that I did not, I could have taken a 360˙ here, because some variation of this stretched in ever direction. Quite a nice day to drive around in the rain. Just as a note, Sundance Resort, and the Sundance Institute did, use images from my commission, in various ways, publishing it in printed materials, and hanging prints about resort, but they never used ANY of these. What???
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Thursday, October 24, 2019
Sundance #67: When you drive to Sundance from Orem on the Provo Canyon Road (Hwy #189), you pass between two large mountain massifs. Mount Timpanogos, and Cascade Mountain. Please use this link I have provided to appreciate what I am describing, and what the above picture represents. Cascade Mountain. in particular, confronts the highway with some very rugged and dramatic walls. One of the “destination” ice-climbing waterfalls, Bridal Veil, pours down one of the more vertical slots in the wall. In the same way the water and ice stream down those faces, so does the fall color. Here you see, what I consider to be optimal conditions for color photography, without any colorizing in Adobe. It is raining on-and-off, fall color is peak, and the sky is a bright overcast. This view has it all - big scale, dramatic color, playing peek-a-boo through the passing weather. Thank you Eliot Porter for teaching me to appreciate “dancin’ in the rain."
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Thursday, October 17, 2019
Sundance #66: At their upper elevations, the US Forest Service recreational access roads reach areas where exposed vertical rock rises to the summits. These walls are not as verdant as the forest-choked lower valleys, but there is still plenty of growth here to put on a stunning fall show, as it creeps straight up. Clusters of Vine Maple and small evergreens grow in places where there appears to be no available soil, they just pop out of the rock. In a hard rain, many of these un-vegetated chutes become streaming waterfalls, as well. I love this Artist-In-Residence, in which I am participating. It is a feast for my eyes in EVERY season, but the fall, in particular, it is off-the-chart. Were it not for these pictures, if I just described this to you, no one would believe it.
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Thursday, October 10, 2019
Sundance #65: Some of the steep walls and valleys on the South Fork side of Provo Canyon are revealed by driving a system of rugged dirt roads created by the US Forest Service for public recreational access . As these roads climb, the surrounding landscape becomes quite vertical as well. Some of this terrain is spare (last post), but even so, it goes off in a dazzling array of fall color. Other valleys are, literally, choked by a profuse, intermixed forest of evergreens and Aspens. When these verdant spots go off, the only word I can think of that describes it, is psychedelic. Wind ripples flowing across this clove of color is a true cosmic vision. I believe I understand why both Native Americans, and arriving Mormons, thought that the Wasatch Mountains, and in particular, Mt. Timpanogos, were sacred places.
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Thursday, October 3, 2019
Sundance #64: Sundance Resort sits high in the North Fork Basin at the foot of the Mt. Timpanogos. If you descend the North Fork Highway, it will bring you to the semi-freeway of Hwy #189, also know as Provo Canyon Road. The mountains that form the other side of the canyon, looking across it at Sundance, are rugged, and less traveled than the North Fork side, but for hunters, and recreational access, the US Forest Service supports a network of backcountry dirt roads that take me to some amazing places, but are tricky to drive upon during the rain, and having 4-wheel capability is a desirable thing. The terrain differs from the North Fork side, as well, supporting numerous steep walls, and canyons, and a different mix of vegetation. As fall peaks, and rain falls, this becomes one of my favorite drives.
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Thursday, September 26, 2019
Sundance #63: I am giving you a meadow’s eye view of the fall show building. In post #62, you are quite literally in the thick(et) of it. Now I want to step back and look at a variety of hills and walls displaying. The image above is taken close to a farm, somewhere between the towns of Charleston and Midway, and I am looking at Mt. Timpanogos in the background. Look at the varied display of color that engulfs this hillside. Between the textures and the tones, these foothills appear to me like brocaded tapestries, and as such I bring many Sundance images to my embroidery collaborators in Suzhou, China, trying to capture that same feeling with their complex stitches (post #37).
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Thursday, September 19, 2019
Sundance #62: Thickets of trees that seem similar in the rather uniform green of summer, suddenly distinguish themselves from one another as the colors of fall, flood into their leaves. There are many places around the Wasatch Mountains where trees are growing in stands, and they are usually similarly colored in the turn of fall, all yellow, all red. But, overgrown thickets and river banks are a complex intermix of tree varieties, and shrubbery, so when all of these flame off with their individual colors, woven together through entwined branches, it is a psychedelic display to say the least. When all of this starts floating gently on a light breeze, the only appropriate description I can think of is, “trippy.” On a drizzly, but bright day, like above, Sundance and its environs are one of the greatest shows on Earth.
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Thursday, September 12, 2019
Sundance #61: Even as the flame of fall colors spreads up the hillsides, it has only just started to go off. With each passing cold night, or rainy day, the shifting colors intensify. The unique thing about the Wasatch Mountains in the fall, is the tree diversity, each with its own color, or shade of a color. As the brilliance of fall grows, the varied trees distinguish themselves with their leaf show. Also, in looking through film I have already shot, I have realized that because we are nearly alpine, where the sky is clear, and you are in the shade, there is A LOT of blue in the shadows that the film reads. The more I shoot, the greater my sense of how to use this color, as a foil for all the others. The intensity of the blue is also greatly magnified right after a rain, when wet surfaces that face skyward, are even more color reflective.
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Thursday, September 5, 2019
Sundance #60: As the fall color comes to the Wasatch Mountains, and the basin around the Sundance Resort it spreads like a flame, through the brush, up the slopes, and into the trees. Especially after an extended rain, when colors are extremely saturated, it is hard to believe they could get more jacked-up. Then I catch some great early morning light, playing across ridges and hills in ways so dramatic, a painter could not have dreamed it up this perfectly. My love of color-for-the-sake-of-color is on steroids. The fall, however, is fleeting, and the same storms that trigger the change, are also knocking the leaves off, so I launch into a frenzy of constant patrolling on all of the roads in the area from dawn to dusk.
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Thursday, September 5, 2019
Sundance #60: As the fall color comes to the Wasatch Mountains, and the basin around the Sundance Resort it spreads like a flame, through the brush, up the slopes, and into the trees. Especially after an extended rain, when colors are extremely saturated, it is hard to believe they could get more jacked-up. Then I catch some great early morning light, playing across ridges and hills in ways so dramatic, a painter could not have dreamed it up this perfectly. My love of color-for-the-sake-of-color is on steroids. The fall, however, is fleeting, and the same storms that trigger the change, are also knocking the leaves off, so I launch into a frenzy of constant patrolling on all of the roads in the area from dawn to dusk.
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Thursday, August 29, 2019
Sundance #59: The Sundance Institute and Resort are located in a basin of Mt. Timpanagos, part of the Wasatch Mountains of Utah. Timp is a massive summit with numerous cirques and and lesser peaks all part of the greater mountain. The North Fork basin, where Sundance is situated, lies on the eastern side of the true summit, and Stewart Falls descends from snowmelt in the Cascade Cirque beneath a towering face.In this picture, the true summit is out-of-frame to the left, but you can see Stewart Falls, the wet rock illuminated by sunlight, lower-left. The lesser peak depicted here is Elk Point. I am looking north from the slopes of the ski area, and marveling as the creep of colors goes alpine. Below this basin, the habitat is drier and hotter a good part of the year, so it has fewer evergreen trees, and more high desert scrub (post #56). At Sundance, however, aspen and evergreens abound, and so there are some VERY striking and complex color displays as the forest transitions to winter.
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Thursday, August 22, 2019
Sundance #58: In the Wasatch Mountains, the location of the Sundance resort, the VERY colorful fall begins at ground level, in the grasses and the bushes. As it progresses, it creeps up - both, up the hillsides to the summits, and from the forest floor, up to the treetops. In the hills around Heber City and Midway, there is little tree cover and the high desert asserts itself. By the end of summer’s heat, things look very brown, and dried out. When the season changes, however, and the rains and cooler temperatures reclaim the days, what seemed so scorched beneath the sun, now begins to flame with color. Wet days and cold nights will actually cause colors to change OVERNIGHT. In this late afternoon light, it looks like a luxurious tapestry.
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Thursday, August 15, 2019
Sundance #57: When fall comes to Sundance Resort in the Wasatch Mountains of Utah, the seasonal color change of the vegetation begins at ground level, in the grasses, brush, and vine maple. The green slopes of the summer months that seemed relatively homogenous in their coloration, now slowly begin to differentiate in some dazzling displays. As it rains more often and temperatures drop, the colors of the forest floor, spread through the diverse groundcover, and climb the steep walls around, right up to the summit meadows. In a bright overcast sky after a good rain, the vibrancy of the varied hues and shades is just stunning, and the display might cover a sheer wall, or a lengthy vertical valley, like an elaborate, textural tapestry. Not having a “mission” connected to my Artist-in-Residency at Sundance is Redford’s point. He wants me to enjoy this place as much as he does, and to use this “break” he is offering me, to pursue “personal” work, rather than project-driven work. Fall in the Wasatch, and my love of color and light, come together in these images like none, other in my career. I was lucky enough to enjoy 3 fall seasons during my tenure, and now I am excited to post, the many remarkable pictures created.
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Thursday, August 08, 2019
Sundance #56: As the summer heat dissipates around the Wasatch Mountains and the Sundance Resort, fall settles in and seasonal change in the weather brings longer rains and colder nights. I go out storm chasing everyday, trying to take advantage of the incredible light of a bright overcast, and the rich, water-saturated colors of the landscape. As I have stated previously in this blog, we are in the high desert of Utah, and as the backroads around Sundance, slowly wind their way downward to the Provo Valley floor, there is an interesting zone of transitional vegetation. The aspens and pines of the higher alpine ecosystem give way to more grasses, wildflowers, shrubs, and vine maple. As a consequence, these niches of diversity are radiant with both color and texture (and the rattlesnakes have gone back into hibernation - LOL).
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Thursday, August 01, 2019
Sundance #55: As summer at Sundance wanes, much as when the ski season ends, many people leave the resort area. Their considerable loss! The fall in the Wasatch Mountains is one of the MOST dazzling in North America. The hot days of July and August eventually turn the “greeness" of spring (last 3 posts) to a more golden hue. Before the trees begin their change, the grasses and wildflowers dry up, and hints of fall color-to-come, creep into the groundcover. The humid days that culminate in thunderstorms grow fewer, and the storms are colder. More than likely, rain is no longer a brief event, but rather one that lasts for several days, and represents the fall pattern setting up. Eventually these rains, and the decreasing temperature, will trigger changes in the trees, but for the moment it soaks the landscape sufficiently to bring the drying colors back to vibrancy, once saturated by water. As a color photographer, I appreciate these conditions most of all, and often work during, and immediately after, bouts of weather to capitalize on the many things a rainy day brings. Above is an example of numerous elements coming together: it has rained, now the sky is clear, and the sun is shining; the dry grasses and leaves are wet, washed off, and radiant with saturated color; the sky above is humidity-free and super-blue, so the wet sticks are reflecting sky color, bringing an astounding array of contrasting hues and shades, all into one frame. If you read my other blogs, you already are aware, I love to make “pictures of nothing,” of which there are many in my NEA blog and my Order from Chaos blog. This image of dead branches and dry grass is another of my favorites.
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Thursday, July 25, 2019
Sundance #54: The mountains surrounding the Sundance area host a lot of steep summits, and sheer walls. The simple photographic perspective for that is to use the apparent “flatness” of a dramatically ascending hillside as a graphic of shape and color, which I did in the previous post. What I lack in that last post is the PRECISE moment of the day at that spot, to truly capitalize on what might be there. The midday haze of heat, and the directly overhead sunlight, wash-out the saturation of color and definition that might optimize the shot. Later in the day, however, with the heat haze in retreat, and the intensity of light reduced as the sun lowers in the sky, a true SYMPHONY of shades emerge. One of my more popular prints from this suite of work, this is, “One of the 3-Dimensional Possibilities of Spring."
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2019, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, July 18, 2019
Sundance #53: This image and the next are the end of my “green” postings, which will give way to the coming of fall. In those images, I will visit this “route” many times, and it will look QUITE different. For now, in the heat of summer, I am driving the USFS maintained, South Fork Road, on the other side of the Provo Valley, looking back at Mt. Timpanogos and Sundance. This is a gravel road that leads into some “deep” ranches, and it slips through various passes between many vertical valleys and summits. The steep walls harbor a different mix of deciduous trees and conifers, and as you will find out, there is a remarkable groundcover that will become more visible, as the seasons change. At the moment, I am trying to “extract” all the diversity of green that my might film might see. The light of day makes many “clusters” glow in quite different ways. This particular image is too “hot” to be as dimensional as I had hoped the radiant light might make it, but the layers were there, AND, if you keep working an idea, it will eventually pay off as you will see in the next post
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2019, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, July 11, 2019
Sundance #52: With the arrival of summer at Sundance, the view disappears as the green glow grows, and the days heat up. Many of the backroads that I drive upon to shoot, loose their vistas as the trees leaf out. It is probably a good thing there are leaves in the forest, though, because they provide some shade and relief from the blazing sunny days. Being beneath their canopy spares you from the direct sun, and it is also a great place to relax on a hot afternoon, while warm breezes cause the surrounding Aspens to shimmer. Because of the heat, I seem to be the least productive as a photographer in the summertimes of my residency, but I do spend more time around the Sundance Institute buildings interacting with the mentors and students. I am not here to teach a workshop, but it is inevitable that when the guests know who I am, they want to ask me for technical advice, and everyone enjoys the location so much, they ALL want to take pictures.
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Thursday, July 4, 2019
Sundance #51: Besides the “green-up” of spring awakening the forests around Sundance, it also melts the snowpack and the rivers rise. Stewart Falls becomes a thundering cascade, instead of a trickle or drip waterfall that it will retreat to as summer passes, American Fork and the Provo River rise and rush. The placid flows of the low water months are replaced a roar and turbulence that can exceed river banks and threaten the lives of foolish swimmers. Pools and eddies that might be excellent places to escape the heat of summer, are just flat-out dangerous in the spring. Fishing also becomes trickier, if it can be done at all. I enjoy the drama of the high water, but I also keep my distance from slippery rocks and ledges, because falling will result in getting seriously pummeled and perhaps, drowned. It happens frequently on big rivers in California like the Kern and the Merced, which claim lives every year, but the same can happen here although the watercourses may appear smaller and more shallow. The force of the seasonal runoff, can surprise even experienced fishermen and sweep them off their feet. It is hard to regain your composure when your waders are full of ice-cold water, and you are being bounced off of rocks.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2019, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, June 27, 2019
Sundance #50: With the coming of spring around Sundance, the lonely dark evergreen finally has A LOT of company. Some trees flower first, but eventually put out leaves, as well. The profusion of variance in the color green is staggering. I always enjoy the burst of life, and the coming of warmer days, but my pleasure is bittersweet, because I loose sight of the “bones” of the landscape that are revealed when the forest is leafless. As spring brings new growth, the landscape “beneath” disappears to be replaced by a dense skein of trees that is often visually impenetrable. Speaking as a photographer, this new subject does not sit conveniently still, either. It sways and rustles in the breeze. It is a vibrant living thing that wants to move around, so it presents new challenges. Nonetheless, it defines the return of robust life, and is a beautiful thing to behold.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2019, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, June 20, 2019
Sundance #49: Because Sundance is situated in what is considered to be Utah’s high desert, it gets very hot in the summer. When spring arrives, it is more often than not, quite brief, and then things heat up. The green comes on in a rush. Trees and bushes leaf out, and the spare “stick thicket” of the winter, of which I have posted many pictures previously in this blog, gives way to a whole new array of verdant tones. One of my first important bodies or work, “ORDER FROM CHAOS,” was an exercise to deny any specific location or subject in a landscape photograph. I wanted the viewer to just see the full frame of the image like a Jackson Pollock painting, and simply appreciate the flow of color and forms within the frame. Now, in this blog, and the one about my Artist-in-Residence at the University of Wisconsin which follows this on Thursday afternoons, I am taking what I learned in the earlier portfolio of work, and applying it to landscapes with a very different intent, but a similar result - complex pictures of vegetation thrash, but these are typical to a specific regional area. At Sundance there is a single green that lasts through the winter season - the evergreen trees. In the winter, their color stands alone. Now here, in the flush of spring, the evergreen is surrounded by a myriad of other shades and colors as life bursts forth.
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Thursday, June 13, 2019
Sundance #48: In the winter, the North Fork Highway that leads from Provo Canyon up to the Sundance Resort and beyond, is closed at Aspen Grove, a family camp established by Brigham Young University. Like Sundance, Aspen Grove is in a dramatic setting defined by sheer cirque headwalls and hanging gardens. This is Primrose Cirque “emerging” and “greening-up” in early spring. Historically, the Aspen Grove Trailhead that leads to the summit of Mt. Timpanagos, is the preferred approach to the peak, leading up several thousand feet through wildflower filled meadows, many small streams, and Emerald Lake. As you can see, this is quite a vertical ascent, made possible by a seemingly endless array of trail switchbacks. Besides great views, at the top, the north side of the trail, plunges dizzily downward into the Timpanogos Basin. It is a magnificent hike in the cooler, blooming, water-flowing days of spring, but in the heat of summer, it can be BRUTAL! Timp is an amazing, complex mountain, of which the Sundance Resort is just a tiny part. The scale of ALL of this, with the myriad peaks and cirques, caused the early Native American inhabitants, to view the mountain as sacred.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2019, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, June 6, 2019
Sundance #47: Mt. Timpanogos is a tall summit, but also a massif that contains numerous other high points, and many cirques with sheer headwalls. Robert’s Horn and Elk Point are notable secondary peaks, and Big Baldy sits on the western side, humbly at the foot of the the towering faces that look out across the Provo and the Great Salt Lake Basin. Directly above Sundance, and part of the dramatic setting in which the resort is situated, lie Big Provo Cirque and Cascade Cirque, whose faces define the Sundance skyline. Further up the North Fork Road lies Aspen Grove, a family camp facility established by Brigham Young University (BYU). The walls of Primrose Cirque define that skyline. Although closed in the winter, beyond Aspen Grove, the road continues on, cresting a ridge and then dropping into American Fork Canyon, which delineates the north side of Timp. On this side, Pika Cirque plunges into Woolly Hole, and below that rises the lesser summit, Mahogany Mountain. Referred to as the Alpine Loop Scenic Highway, this deep American Fork Canyon traverses the entire north face, and eventually leads back to Interstate 15, well north of Provo. Along the route are many campgrounds, numerous waterfalls, and Timpanagos Cave National Monument. In the blazing heat of summer, the canyon offers shade, and the cooling presence of the flowing water. After a long day of exposure while I work, I often retreat here for a break. The deep shade and shimmering pools are a stark contrast to the simmering heat,..and welcome relief.
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Thursday, May 30, 2019
Sundance #46: In the winter, Stewart Falls is a cascade of ice. It is dramatic because there are several tiers to the falls, and as the water freezes, it creates some spectacular formations. In the spring, after the ice melts away, and the water begins to flow, it becomes something else entirely. In the same way the falls is “born again,” the life around it is, as well. A rocky, spare terrain, quite literally, begins to ooze with life. Plants spring from cracks in the rocks. Wildflowers bloom on vertical walls, and mosses revel in the constant stream of moisture. This part of Utah is high desert, and in the summer months, it can get extremely hot. I am making this picture just after sunrise, and it is already 88˙. Next to the falls, however, it is cool and verdant. The spray cools the air, and the mist creates rainbows everywhere. A spring hike, up through the gardens this watercourse nurtures, is one of the most rewarding day-trips to be had anywhere. (Be sure to click on the link I have provided above, AND THEN scroll through the considerable volume of pictures, both winter and summer, to get a truly great perspective of this experience.)
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2019, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, May 23, 2019
Sundance #45: The water cascading down Stewart Falls from the snowfields above on Mt. Timpanogos flow right through the Sundance resort. In fact, Redford has capitalized on that (posts #11-12), and made the flowing water, and the sound of it, a centerpiece of community activity, well appreciated by visitors, strollers, and those who want to picnic. In some places it is literally, etherial, it is so verdant, SO lush. Reflecting on the Sundance Institute workshops and residencies Redford has created, such as mine, imagine you are a dancer that has just spent the morning working out under the tutelage of Twyla Tharp. When lunchtime arrives, you ALL leave the studio to sit by the stream, eat, and socialize WITH Twyla, because she joins you. Really? Just grazing with Twyla! Not bad. This is the very ambiance Redford hopes to create, so that aspiring artists can interact with well established ones, in a comfortable, casual, natural environment, which he believes will be of benefit to all. I don’t know about the others in residences and teachers, but this sure works for me!
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Thursday, May 16, 2019
Sundance #44: For these months of winter just past, I have spent many posts regaling you with winter images and tales. Now it is time for a break from that, so we can all warm up, and go green. When I say “green” regarding the spring at Sundance, I mean SCREAMING lush green. Since summers at Sundance, and in the Great Salt Lake Basin, are often very hot, the warming transition of spring happens very quickly. The bud bloom-out, and the emergence of grasses and flowers, happens in a relatively short amount of time. At this point in the history of its development, many view Sundance only as a ski resort, so during the spring, most of the population in the area is employees. With temperatures rising, the high elevation snow begins to melt rapidly under the intensifying heat of the sun, and the streams and rivers below, swell and roar. Above the resort is a big, high basin that sits beneath the summit of Mt. Timpanogos, and the meltwater from there, flows to the resort, cascading down the dramatic and picturesque, Stewart’s Falls. Summer hiking trails access the high meadows revealed from beneath the snow, which come alive with spectacular blooms of alpine wildflowers, but just the view of the falls from the resort area is stunning, and more than enough for some. Scale here is unreadable because this is big country, so I will remind you that Timpanagos is 11,752ft., and if there were 100 people on the hiking trail, it is unlikely you would be able to see any of them in this picture, although they would be right in front of you.
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Thursday, May 9, 2019
Sundance #43: After awhile, the cold of the night surrounding Bearclaw Cabin, at the summit of the Sundace resort ski area, overcomes our fascination with the full moon, so my colleagues and I retreat indoors for some dessert, and a good night’s sleep. I have set my watch alarm to wake me well before the expected sunrise, as I know leaving the cabin to shoot is going to be bracingly cold in the early hours of dawn. When it does go off, I rally, trying not to disturb the others, but to my surprise, they all willingly arise to join me. As one of them said, “Not everyone gets to do this, I want to see it all.” And so we do! We linger inside with warm drinks, until the first peep of light, then it is out of the cabin for the big POV. The valley below is a cold, deep blue, and when the sun begins to illuminate the distant summits, they not only appear warmly lit, they makes us feel that way as well. The rosette hues fade quickly, however, as daylight begins to flood the entire landscape, and although we linger awhile longer, the event is over. We retire to the cabin for breakfast, collect our gear, and prepare to take the lift down. Not everyone knows that we are up here, so when the lifts begin to run, and the lift operators and ski patrol begin to show up for their morning prep, most are very surprised to find our group waiting at the top to ride down. No one is upset, most just wish they had joined us for our howling good time.
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Thursday, May 2, 2019
Sundance #42: By 9p.m. the radiance of the full moon has lighted the landscape, and now all the lights of the humanscape are on as well. The world is aglow in an beautiful, bright, blue-white night. And, boy, is it cold and clear! The POV above is a slight shift to the right from the previous post. The green glow of the Sundance resort can still be seen, mid-left, and in this shot, the aura of the light nicely illuminates the steep, narrow canyon that is the North Fork road leading up to the resort. Mid-right lights are on the highway, as it winds around the Deer Creek Reservoir, now frozen over. Beyond that, the concentration of lights (upper, right) is Heber City, and the surrounding rural homes. Although you can barely see it in this image, the few points of light in the upper left are Deer Valley-Park City resort complex. I am working with a Pentax 6x7 camera on a tripod, shooting Fujichrome Velvia film. My exposures are very long, and I make several shots of everything to bracket, as the light is too low for the meter to read accurately. All of this requires some patience and a complete lack of wind, of which, there is none. So, once again the sling chairs re-emerge, and the wolf-pack patrols the summit under the full moon.
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Thursday, April 25, 2019
Sundance #41: The two-tone sky, full moonrise (last post) goes by pretty quickly, and the blue of night finally erases the last warm tones from the sky. My friends and I have howled ourselves hoarse, and become cold, sitting outside during the moonrise event, so we retreat to the warmth of Bearclaw Cabin for some more food and further libations. I am not sure what other pictures I might make, now that night has fallen, so I am not expecting anything until sunrise. However, after an hour or so in the cabin, the night is still young, and it seems to be growing ever brighter,..A LOT brighter! Of course, we expected it to be bright, it is a full moon after all, but it only just now occurs to me that the full moon directly above is being 100% reflected of off the white snow cover. The landscape is bright like day. The ridge in the foreground is a widely used ski run. The green glow and other lights in the deep gorge are Sundance resort, and the big, white meadow in the middle, is Redford’s ranch property. The lights are on there, so perhaps he is home, and it looks like guests are departing, as they wind down the driveway.
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Thursday, April 18, 2019
Sundance #40: My purpose in overnight camping at Sundance’s Bearclaw Cabin is to see a full moonrise, and hopefully a sunrise the next morning, other than that I am not sure what to expect. Despite the obscuring layer of smog that lies over Provo and the Great Salt Lake basin to the west, to the east it is “cold and clear.” Visibility is spectacular in the Heber Valley, and well beyond. My friends and I have a great dinner in the comfort of the cabin, and now, fully adorned with layers of fleece and down, we are outside in sling chairs enjoying some libations. We know the moon will rise “out there,” somewhere, but as we await it, something else quite unexpected happens. The sun is setting directly behind us, and the last rays of light set the sky aglow. Then, from behind the distant mountains, the blue aura of night begins to creep up. This spectacle of the split-toned sky across such a vast landscape is freaking amazing, so much so, when the moon finally does pop up, it seems irrelevant. Nonetheless (as you might expect) a howling good time is had by us all.
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Thursday, April 11, 2019
Sundance #39: Except for the horrible smog over the city of Provo, created by a cold weather inversion in the Great Salt Lake Basin, our perch in Bearclaw Cabin at the summit of the Sundance resort ski area, looks out over a very cold, clear night that promises a full moon rise. Since I will need to make extremely long exposures as the evening wears on, I am grateful that it is not windy. The terrace around the hut is well-packed down from use by all the skiers, so I have a fantastic platform with a 360˙ perspective that becomes expansive to the north and east, looking out over the Deer Creek Reservoir and the Heber Valley. Inside, the hut is warm, the food is good, and in spite of the smog to the west, elsewhere from our lofty POV, the end of the day presents a great sunset show for our after-dinner cocktails, so we grab sling-chairs, and take up positions on the ridge to watch the coming of night, and the arrival of the moon.
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Thursday, April 4, 2019
Sundance #38: Having just taken you through some of the lowest lying terrain in my residency area, Provo River canyon, it seems appropriate to visit the other extreme as well, the top of the ski lift at Sundance. Previously in this blog, post #5, I show you people gathered at the summit hut, eating, and sitting in the sun. Named Bearclaw Cabin, the hut is relatively small, but contains a kitchen, service area, and tables/chairs for 30-50 people, the rest spills over to the outside. It is closed down at night, but with the blessing of the resort, I work with a friend on the ski patrol, and arrange to camp in the hut, overnight during a full moonrise. We pre-prep food to take up so we minimize the cooking, then all we need are sleeping bags, floor pads, and my camera gear. We take the last lift run up for the day, and watch everyone slowly disappear downslope, as we offload our supplies. It has been a very cold day and in the Great Salt Lake Basin, an inversion layer has trapped stifling air pollution on the ground, blanketing to invisibility both Salt Lake and Provo. This view from Bearclaw Cabin at Sundance looks out of the mouth of Provo Canyon, directly at the city of Provo, normally twinkling with thousands of urban lights. That is NOT a fog, THAT is smog! Fortunately for our lungs, that is trapped well below us for this evening, and very little of it has intruded into the canyon.
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Thursday, March 28, 2019
Sundance #37: My morning in the cold depths of the Provo River canyon, rewards me with several images (the last two posts) that become an important part of my portfolio, and print sales. As it turns out, my residency at Sundance has begun some years after my first visits to China, and at the guild where I am translating my images into textiles, I always present new work I think might excite their interests. The embroiderers I work with appreciate that I have an unusual take on how they might consider rendering an image, and they are fully on-board when I present the last post as a subject. Rather than just embroidering the entire picture, I want them to do this as a double-sided piece, leaving the water and the background with stitching “thin” enough to provide transparency. Then, elaborate on the stitching that defines the trees and ice. My colleague, and collaborator, Zhang Mei-Fang, also assures me that they will “pay special attention” to the illusion of steam rising from the water. The above is the finished product. The embroidery is about 16”x 20”. Because of the way it has been sewn, when brightly illuminated from behind, the reflective snow is blindingly white, the ice crystals in the trees truly look as thought they have sunlight radiating though them, and the steam IS rising off of the river. The display stand is mahogany, carved with a phoenix motif, and the image can be rotated 360˙. I want to thank Robert Redford for inviting me to Sundance, because the work I created there carried well beyond my residency. I am also happy to say this embroidery, “River Scene in Winter,” is in the collection of Michelle Lund of Newport Beach, CA.
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Thursday, March 21, 2019
Sundance #36: Moving quickly from one location to another in Provo Canyon, trying to take advantage of the unusual conditions, I find this POV in walking distance from a parking plow-out on the highway. Apparently a lot of people come here to access the river for fishing, and if you look carefully, you can see footprints on the right shore, from someone fishing along it. I am still in a pocket of extreme cold as well, so even tough there is full sunlight, the ice crystal melt-out of the bushes and branches has not yet occurred. Best of all, I am legally parked, so I can sit here and take this in. Looking back at this moment, I realize my mantra of “seize the day and go out to shoot, regardless of the weather,” played out many times in my career. What is most striking, some of the worst days, produced some of the best shoots. Many times in the terrible conditions, going out, and staying out all day, produced not one, but several images important to my career. This, and the previous post, became two of my best selling prints, and this image was selected for embroidery when I was collaborating with an embroidery guild in Suzhou, China. I will show you that embroidery next week, and you can learn more about my 35yrs. of collaborative work in China, here.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2019, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, March 14, 2019
Sundance #35: The Provo Canyon highway is snow-embanked, with only a few plowed turnouts, but I am fortunate that there are no other cars as yet this morning, so I occasionally stop, turn on my blinkers, and climb the snowplow mound, to see what I can see. Because the river meanders, changing the angle on the rising sun, some sunny areas are already frost-free, having melted out in the first rays of warmth. Then I arrive here. Lots of sun. Everything is still frost covered, AND I am at a low point in the snow wall, with little brush near the highway that might obscure the view. This is a great POV, but it is some kind of cold pocket as well, and while I work for this shot, the temp drops to -20˙ I am wearing two pair of gloves and my fingertips are still numb. Probably the only reason that my Pentax 6x7 is still working is that the heater in the car, warms it.
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Thursday, March 7, 2019
Sundance #34: As my workshop students know, one of my caveats is that there is no such thing as a bad day. Regardless of conditions, if you plan to go out and shoot, do so, regardless. I would be first to admit, I was not especially excited to wake and find the morning at Sundance to be sub-zero. Good time to have a long, slow breakfast in the Tree Room,..or not. I did the “or not,” and drove down into Provo Canyon, where it is even colder. My reward is that the air is SO cold, the river is steaming, and the vapor is attaching as ice crystals to all the trees and shrubs onto which it drifts. It is an amazing spectacle, and I struggle to know where to be. As the rising sun begins to light up the canyon, it is also melting the ice frosting. Because I am still in a lot of shadow, I feel I should move to sunnier locations before they melt away.
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Thursday, February 28, 2019
Sundance #33: On this sub-zero morning, it seems no one is out yet on the highway that traverses the Provo River canyon, between Provo and Heber City. After driving down from the Sundance/North Fork basin, several thousand feet above, I am immersed in the -8˙ air that has sunk to the lowest point, hovering above the river. As the river water is warmer, it is steaming, and the steam is frosting some things, as you see in the last post. I arose at dawn for this drive-about, so there was no sunlight, when I first entered the river canyon, just deep, freezing cold shade. Driving along the highway to the north, changes all of that. It does not get any warmer, but the sunrise finally reaches the river, and it does get a lot “trippier.” This is the “for real” Crystal Blue Persuasion, not the same as what Tommy James was singing about, but WAY better. Follow the next few posts of this morning’s adventure to see some remarkable, and very fleeting moments on planet Earth.
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Thursday, February 21, 2019
Sundance #32: Below 0˙ all night, but flowing rapidly enough to keep a lot of open water, the Provo River water is warmer than the -8˙ air above it now, so it has been, and is now, steaming. The steam rises on the slightest wind current, and ultimately turns to ice crystals floating in the air. However, if the rising water vapor touches something cold, such as the branches of trees, it freezes immediately, encrusting the twigs. This can be a very subtle process, as some areas of the tree may remain “warmer,” and thus, no crystals materialize. I work with this for several shots, but my camera is having vapor-on-the-lens problems, and the frozen air particles I breathe into my lungs burn, so I return to my SUV, and begin a drive toward Heber City, following the sinews and bends of the Provo River.
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Thursday, February 14, 2019
Sundance #31: In the previous post, you see a fog over the low valley of the Deer Creek Reservoir. It has been created because the air is SO cold, it literally freezes, and the crystals cause the haze. This condition occurs frequently, when it is cold AND CLEAR, and the temperature falls into the teens or below. It starts with a dawn like the one above over Sundance resort. The sky is “bluebird.” The temperature has been falling all night, and at the resort this morning, it is about 10˙. Cold air sinks, however, and Sundance sits in a high basin, beneath Mt. Timpanogos. Provo Canyon is well below us, and interestingly, it is MUCH colder down there. That is where the coldest air has settled. As I drive the relatively steep North Fork Road, slowly down into the Provo River canyon, the outside temperature plummets, and I enter a zone of haze-frost briefly. Then, I pass beneath it, into a VERY different world of predawn, super-cold (-8˙) blue shade. Where my road meets the canyon highway, I also come immediately to the banks of the Provo River, which the highway parallels. The presence of the river makes for a whole new environment, I need to immediately stop and consider.
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Thursday, February 7, 2019
Sundance #30: There is another kind of haze created at Sundance and around the Provo Canyon and Heber Valley, but it does not occur because of wind-whipped snow crystals floating in the air. Quite to the contrary, it is created by just the opposite condition, dead-calm, and super-cold. Because Provo Canyon is deep, narrow, and flowing with water, it generates very cold air laden with moisture. The water vapor literally freezes, creating an ice-fog. Unlike the blowing snow (previous posts), this haze does not occur on the ridges and summits, it sinks to whatever the lowest point is, which includes the canyon and the surface of the frozen-over Deer Creek reservoir.The image above is taken from a turnout above the reservoir, over which the Timpanogos ( mt. timpanogos temple ) summit towers. It is just before dawn, and you can see the sky about the mountain is clear, and blue-sky. This is a winter condition skiers refer to as clear-and-cold, meaning REALLY cold, perhaps even sub-zero. When you look at the bottom half of this frame, however, it is not clear, because a ground-level, ice-fog has been created by the freezing conditions.
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Thursday, January 31, 2019
Sundance #29: With the sun now almost entirely gone, North Fork Canyon is blustery, dark, and COLD, but the amazing display of light on Mt. Timpanogos is too interesting to abandon. I walk up the road a bit from where I made the previous profile shot (last post), and I am now completely in the shadow of the east face. It is a blue world, with a gentle haze of crystals floating everywhere. Then, as the very last light of the setting sun crowns the summit ridge, I decide to photograph the shadow of the mountain, not the light show. From my POV, there is no dramatic composition, just a rugged face barely discernable in the impending darkness. My camera meter is telling me I must make a multi-second exposure, and for the moment I can do so because the winds have abated slightly. While I can see the subtle illumination left on the western ridge, I did not think it will record, because it is barely visible. Nonetheless, the magic of “trying,” wins the day, and the above is the result. Now, the sun is gone, I am freezing, and I intend to have a huge dinner in the warmth of the Tree Room, to make up for being out all day in some very sketchy weather.
photograph(s) © copyright, ROBERT GLENN KETCHUM, 2019, @RbtGlennKetchum @LittleBearProd #LittleBearProd
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Thursday, January 24, 2019
Sundance #28: The howling windstorm of the last two days, has made skiing conditions less than desirable, so most of the “day-trippers” who came to ski Sundance, have gone home. Because I am staying at the resort, I am not faced with a treacherous drive out, so I linger as the sun sets and watch the glow-show swirling around Mt. Timpanogos. North Fork Canyon, where the resort is located, has now slipped into the shadow of the summit, and is growing ever darker. One of the summit faces, however, looks due west, and consequently, the towering ridgeline and all of the snow banners blowing off of it, are backlit and luminous. It is an astounding “profile” moment.
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Thursday, January 17, 2019
Sundance #27: Just before the sun goes down, it seems the wind picks up. You can hear it howling across the summits and faces of Mt. Timpanogos, and the snow banner from the top is blowing off a dense fog of ice crystals into the North Fork basin. It quickly covers me, while I am trying to work, and it is irritating to breath in, as well. It is also an irresistible light show. The increasing wind during the setting sun sets off a massive glowing cloud above the canyon, that then settles like snowfall. It is NOT snow, however, but primarily ice, and it makes road conditions really sketchy. It is on days like this I am grateful I can stay at Sundance, rather than drive down the now-treacherous canyon road, and back to Provo, which so many skiers do at the end of their day. No one wants to do that in the dark, so most have gone home by now and they missed this.
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Thursday, January 10, 2019
SUNDANCE: Artist In Residence, #26:
Sundance #26: With little else to do, I enjoy a late lunch at a country cafe in Heber City and by the time I return to Sundance, the winter sun has slipped behind Timpanogos, and North Fork Canyon is now in evening shade. As has been usual throughout this storm, “Timp" has high-wind snow banners screaming off the summit, making it a spectacle. As I drive further up the canyon, the shade deepens and the temperature drops, but the air, choked with blowing ice crystals, has become prismatic. Not exactly brilliant like a rainbow, but anytime I look toward the sun illumination of the summit, the direct light refracts colors in a kind tonal fog. This shimmer also constantly shifts as the gusts swirl the crystals about. It is an amazing thing to watch, and I actually wish I could have recorded the motion. I also discover the the rainbow aura is only visible in the deep shade of the upper canyon. Descending the road into the next, brighter basin, it disappears. I suspect it is so faint, it needs the darker wall behind it to make it visible.
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Thursday, January 3, 2019
Sundance #25: In the morning (previous post), the howling wind of the night before continues, and between wind-chill exposure, and snow crystals all over my gear, I retreat to my car and decide drive around, hoping to get out of the high-altitude bluster. Headed for lower elevations, I descend North Fork into Provo Canyon, and then turn north toward the Deer Creek Reservoir and Heber City, thinking I will find some relief there, or further out into the farmlands. The road is covered with ice crystals, and it is blowing as hard at ground level around the reservoir, as it was a Sundance. Heber City is like a ghost town, as everyone has taken cover, and when I drive further out, into more open terrain, I encounter ground-blizzards of blowing snow and ice. There is little visibility, and it seems to be getting worse, so I decide to return to the resort. Pulling into a farm driveway, to turn around, this appeared as a snowy-icy gust flew by. Farm dogs are tough, but this one is clearly not happy.
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Thursday, December 27, 2018
Sundance #24: The raging windstorm (last post) continues through the night. It is every ski resort’s worst nightmare. You get a nice, fresh powder snowfall, that is literally blown away by the winds that push the storm east. Those winds have not yet gone away, either. Next morning, this view up a cirque shows a screaming snow banner carried in a horizontal tornado of wind, churning through a saddle between two summits. I am using my SUV for protection so that I do not have camera shake from the fierce gusting, and I am thousands of feet below that pass. It must be stunningly fierce up there. Note that the dry brush in the landscape has reappeared. For a few hours, it was smothered by the snowfall, and all was white, then,..this happened.
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Thursday, December 20, 2018
Sundance #23: Another challenge of the Sundance commission I impose upon myself, is repeatedly confronting the dominant feature of the entire North Fork/Sundance Basin, Mt. Timpanogos. It makes the setting of Sundance what it is. It is so dominant, moving around in the basin does not change your view very much. So, for me the visual aspects I am exploring are the evolution of change on a subject that remains in relatively the same position. In post #8, I point out that storms from the west, slam into the summit, sometimes as deep, dry snowfalls, and sometimes as raging windstorms, or in this case, both. The Sundance basin is located on the east side of the summit, at the foot of one of Timp's most spectacular faces, and on days when it is howling, being below that face, looking up at it, is quite a show. This morning started with an unskiable snowstorm, blowing hard enough to create closures due to avalanche conditions. All day long, I am pounded by blowing snow and crystal. Much of the day is too dark and hazy to get anything done, but in the late afternoon, thinning clouds to the west, let through some low rays of sunlight, and Timpanogos becomes a white, glowing apparition above the resort.
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Thursday, December 13, 2018
Sundance #22: In my earliest portfolios, “WINTERS: 1970-1980” and ORDER FROM CHAOS, my concerns were exclusively visual and painterly. The images in those two portfolios are about how the frame of the picture fills with shape, color, and texture. The location of the landscape is inconsequential, and titles tell you nothing about “place.” In subsequent projects, all of which became books, The Hudson River and the Highlands, The Tongass: Alaska’s Vanishing Rainforest, and Overlooked in America: The Success and Failure of Federal Land Management, the pictures were very much ABOUT “place.” The photographs in those publications were intentionally created to be broadly descriptive, and to make purposeful statements to the public through them. Now, working here in Sundance, Redford has indicated to me that this is a chance to be creative, be free of those concerns, and just enjoy this unique location. As with all landscapes you first experience, you inevitably see and make “beauty” shots, but if you keep working over time with the same subjects at different moments, your insight to them is refined. Certainly this “brushyness” I am experiencing in the high desert, Utah winter (last 3 posts) becomes one of those visual explorations.
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Thursday, December 6, 2018
Sundance #21: In this image, the vertical landscape intersects with an unusual color field. I describe these subtle tones of the barren bushes as “linear haze.” What I see is created by thousands of twigs, and the color is more like a cloud, than a clearly defined thing. I also find the framing and the steep angle really interesting, but best of all, it is SUCH a picture of nothing. It does not aspire to be beautiful, or descriptive of anything. It has no complex compositional trickery. It is just a slope of denuded brush. Personally.., a PERFECT slope of denuded brush. For a sense of scale here, the trees in the distance are huge, the tonal bushes are overhead, and the branches in the foreground are the tops of big trees alongside a small dirt road.
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Thursday, November 29, 2018
Sundance #20: The spare winter of my first Sundance visit provides some very graphic subject matter in the surrounding landscape, and it also leaves many of the high mountain dirt roads accessible, so it I venture where I can. One of the beauties of having access in the vertical environment around Sundance is that it offers many dramatic overviews and perspectives. On a day that has a lot of passing weather, but just cannot seem to snow, I am driving a backcountry road, and I stop for awhile to watch the dappled sunlight slowly creep across the landscape of brush covered hills. I will learn to do this more and more as my residency plays out. The effects of the lighting across the many different parts of this landscape can completely blow things up, or, in this case, cloak them with a subtle glow and color tone that is barely there at all. Sitting to watch the show unfold is a requirement of this new work.
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Thursday, November 22, 2018
Sundance #19: I am getting ahead of myself, however, with the last few posts of seasonal colors. If I gave you my 3yrs. of fall, and fall helicopter work, all at once, it would be too much to digest, so I will parcel it out. I return to my first winter visit, which is quite spare of snow for some of the weeks I spend there. I have been told whether I take pictures or not, and what they might be of, is entirely up to me. Redford says he just wants me to have some time for my creativity to be recharged after the environmental campaign work I have been doing. The very vertical environment of Sundance allows me to use the spectacular weather lighting, stunning fall colors, and graphic forests, to pursue my purely visual interests in color, and complex, intricate detail, creating layered compositions within the picture frame. The first spare winter visit provides some great opportunities.
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Thursday, November 15, 2018
Sundance #18: Higher above the Heber Valley floor the glow of fall color rages randomly up the hillsides, where it encounters more evergreen trees, adding yet another layer, a foil to the brilliance, into the fall mix. On a good day, I also experience fleeting holes of sunlight that pierce the cloud layers, and on occasion, flit across the landscape in such dramatically illuminating waves, it is hard to believe it isn’t choreographed. During some of my more weather-ladened shoots, I find myself on ridges, connected by narrow fire roads and a view like the one above. Standing here for quite some time, I could easily make dozens of images, as that spotlight on the far hillside is just one of many that swim over these mountains and valleys, lighting select trees, groves, and sometimes, just one entire mountain, but nothing else. I spend a lot of time trying to anticipate and record the “best” moment, whatever that means, when there are SO many!
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Thursday, November 8, 2018
Sundance #17: Rain and the overcast bring out saturated colors of the fall foliage, and Sundance sees plenty of weather, so it rains frequently and offers me some amazing images. This is a rural road with great views of Timpanogos in the distance. At the moment, however, Timp is NOT the show as fall is upon us, and the rain is causing all the vegetation to glow, and it is not just a few trees. The bushes change color. The desert grasses do, as well. Everybody gets into the act. As the season intensifies and peaks, the hillsides of the eastern Wasatch scream out with startling puffs of color that go clear to the summits, and the lower slopes are decorated with dense groves of trees, that not only are intermixed species competing for space and nutrients, but they also seem to be having a flamboyant color display of one-ups-manship.
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Thursday, November 1, 2018
Sundance #16: Same place as previous post, but now looking quite different as each of the bushes, plants, and trees goes off with their own shade of fall color. In the course of my Sundance residency, I drove around the Wasatch Range frequently. The Salt Lake City side of the range hosts some very famous ski areas, all to be found up steep narrow canyons. While those canyons also display fall colors, the display is not as diverse, as what happens on the east side. The hills above Provo are a clue to the resplendent diversity of fall color you experience once you begin driving into Provo Canyon. Sundance and Mount Timpanogos mark the southern end of this, but as you drive north from there, around the Provo reservoir, and through Heber City, you eventually come to the resorts of Deer Valley and Park City, which have been developed at the northeast end of the Wasatch. All of this east side terrain experiences a startling fall display. As you can see here, it goes off in pockets and waves. The aspens are just now starting to turn in this image.
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Thursday, October 25, 2018
Sundance #15: The last two posts, and this, show of the verdant greens of spring and summer. The first growth in the aspen groves glows with an emerald radiance that is every bit the equal of the golden colors of fall. As you see here, the mix of trees also punches up the color as the darker evergreens act as foils to the luminous, deciduous groves. I return to this view many times, as it proves to be a POV where there is much to learn. At the moment, besides the aspen and the evergreens, there is other vegetation in small clusters, growing on the rolling hillside, and the hillside, itself, hosts a dense ground cover of mixed species. You can see it all at this moment, because each of these elements has a different texture, but it takes awhile to sort it because EVERYTHING is green. Now, if each of these varied elements in this landscape were of wildly different colors, wouldn’t that be something to see?
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Thursday, October 18, 2018
Sundance #14: Being 11,752ft. is only part of the drama of Mount Timpanogos. It is VERY broad, as well, and driving around it, is like encircling a small mountain range, but it is just one large massif. Scale is difficult to judge with little reference, but perhaps this “detail” from the post last week will help. A hiking trail cuts a small line into ridge of the hill in the foreground, right, but you cannot follow it any great length because it disappears back into trees. Those trees are an entire grove of large aspen. A hiker on the trail would barely be visible. In the basin, above the ledge of the waterfall, flower-filled meadows and extensive groves of trees, make for some spectacular seasonal day hikes and picnics. Handily, nice picnic lunch baskets can be prepared for guests at the Sundance general store. If you stay in the Sundance guest cottages, this is an amazing thing to have in your backyard.
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Thursday, October 11, 2018
Sundance #13: As in the winter, the real “show” at Sundance is the setting, literally at the foot of 11,752ft., Mount Timpanogos. The water you see here, flows through the Sundance property, and hikers often begin from Sundance to ascend into these meadows. Although the summit trailhead is further up the road, past the Sundance resort, the meadows here are extravagantly lush, there are many waterfalls and pools, and there is much less traffic - “Timp” is one of the most climbed summits in all of the Rocky Mountains, so there are always people on that trail. As the summer comes, the snow retreats, and the green slowly climbs up the walls. When fall arrives, as you will see, a spectacle of color comes down the walls.
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Thursday, October 4, 2018
Sundance #12: Like many ski areas, Sundance works to establish summer visitors. The ski lift stays operational to take mountain bikers and tourists to the top of the mountain, and hikers come from all over, to climb the trails in Mt. Timpanogos and visit Timpanogos Caves National Monument. Redford, also offers something very different, an engaging community of the arts. As the first visual artist-in-residence, I join Twyla Tharp, there on a dance residency, and dozens of film makers, playwrights, and screenwriters, who are honing their craft under the tutelage of Redford’s MANY professional friends. Summer days at the resort are busy with their activities, and uninvolved tourists are free to observe while they work. In the upper shot, a film production crew takes a break from their morning efforts to grab some lunch. In the lower shot, tourists and artists alike begin to settle in to the very nice outdoor amphitheater and stage, where on this evening, there will be a concert. Another night it might be a play. As it is too cold to hold these activities in the winter, Redford's most recent idea is to host a small independent film festival during the winter in the cozy, small theater he has added to this compound. Think anyone will come?
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Thursday, September 27, 2018
Sundance #11: As it is becoming a business necessity for ski areas to have summer attractions as well, many of them have started catering to mountain sports such as trail bike-riding, sight-seeing tourists, and hiking, and Sundance is no different. They operate their lifts in the summer to take bike riders to the top of the mountain, and they take tourists there also, to have a look around, and enjoy a lunch at the summit cabin. Redford, however, has introduced another attraction, of which I am now part - the Sundance Institute and the artist residencies. I am the first visual artist-in-residence, but Twyla Tharp precedes me with a dance residency, and numerous screenwriters, and film makers participate too, making summer season a beehive of creative activity. Here you see tourists relaxing in the small complex of buildings and gardens, while they watch a production crew, discuss and review the work they have been doing.
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Thursday, September 20, 2018
Sundance #10: When I discussed being an Artist-In-Residence at Sundance with Robert Redford, I asked what he wanted me to do,..if he had a purpose. His response was that he knew of me through my many years of work with the Natural Resources Defense Council trying to stop the destructive and unnecessary logging of the Tongass rainforest, and he felt it surely took a lot of effort. His idea is that I come to Sundance to enjoy its community of artists and athletes, and if I feel like taking pictures, it is not a requirement, but I may shoot whatever I want. He thinks Sundance is beautiful, which I should enjoy, but there is no agenda for whatever work I might do. He simply hopes the environment will inspire me. On my first visit, I am simply trying to get a feel for this landscape, which clearly is, as Redford described - dramatic and beautiful, BUT my environmentally pro-active mind cannot help but notice the building of the huge dam, lake, and 8-lane highway through the Heber Valley, and then there is this (above). The Great Salt Lake basin, is much like the Los Angeles basin, in that it is a low valley floor, surrounded by mountains. Given the amount of traffic and industry present in the Salt Lake basin, a lot of pollution is generated in the form of smog. In the winter, the cold air puts a “cap” on the pollution, trapping it on the valley floor. On bad days, the smog is so thick, it looks like a fog, and obscures everything. I will probably make some images of that as well.
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Thursday, September 13, 2018
Sundance #9: As I would learn from my collective visits, Sundance resort sits in a high basin at the foot of Mt. Timpanogos. That basin is part of the North Fork of the Provo River, which flows through the canyon below. The canyon connects the west side of the Wasatch Range to the east side, and in some places, as you see in post #1, the walls are steep and narrow. The result of this configuration in the landscape is that during windy storms, there is a funnel effect, the canyon can amplify the force of the wind. At other times, it is a sink of extremely cold air, where a lot of vapor is also present, as you see in post #2, the result of which gives you vapor frosted trees and valley fogs. Provo Canyon connects Provo on the west side, to the Heber Valley on the east side, and when you drive through the canyon, beyond the turn-off for Sundance, you eventually come to a broadening valley and a large reservoir. This large body of water also adds to the vapor in the air, and is often “fogged-in.” Beyond this, to the north, lie the resorts of Park City and Deer Valley. At the time of my Sundance residency, construction had just begun on a controversial dam to create and even larger reservoir, that would then be circumvented by a 8-lane super highway, so I will witness some significant change through the years of my visits.
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Thursday, September 6, 2018
Sundance #8: The Sundance resort sits on the east side of the Wasatch Range, in a basin directly below the 11,753ft summit of Mt. Timpanogos. The Wasatch is famous for its dry powder snowstorms that often deliver several feet of snow in a very short time, hence the Utah license plate motto, “The Greatest Snow on Earth.” When those snowfalls happen, the skiing is fantastic, and the surrounding landscape is quite beautiful, but often, those storms are followed by fierce, dry, cold winds. At many of the Wasatch ski resorts, these conditions create avalanche hazards. At Sundance, the resort is sheltered by the towering face of “Timp” which puts on a howling show of snow banners and light. On this evening, the winds are gusting through at 60mph. It is about 0˙, and WELL below 0˙ with the wind-chill. The lifts at the resort closed early, and most guests have retired to restaurants and bars to seek refuge. However, as the sun goes down, “Timp” is putting on a show and throwing off spectacular, streaming banners of blowing snow. There are ice crystals blowing in the air, constantly filtering down, and wind gusts create small snow squalls as they sweep trees bare. I am amazed my camera is still working.
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Thursday, August 30, 2018
Sundance #7: On my first Artist-in-Residence visit to Sundance, I am invited to stay in the guest cottage on Robert Redford’s ranch. I know that will probably not happen again, so one morning after a big snowfall, I walk the property taking pictures and trying to get a feel for why he chose to live here. The banner picture for this blog is of the ranch road. The last post is Redford’s view to the west, and Mt. Timpanogos. This (above) is the view south and east, taking in the corrals and pastures where he brings his horses in the summer months. During the winter, the horses are moved to valley-level stables nearby, as this high basin is too cold for their comfort, especially when big, blustery storms cycle in the from the west. The resort lies just out-of-sight and to the right in this shot. The Provo River (posts #1-2) lies in the canyon at the foot of that mountain in the distance.
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Thursday, August 23, 2018
Sundance #6: It is the setting that makes Sundance what it is. The ski area is low-key with limited services, and there is a very limited amount of developable land in the basin, virtually guaranteeing Sundance will remain relatively small. As such, it sits in at the foot of the Mt. Timpanogos Wilderness and looks directly up at the 11,753ft summit. “Timp” is not only dramatic, but because of its size, it is a weather-maker in all seasons - thunderstorms in the summer, powder storms, and high winds in the winter. The resort, cottages, and homes for the most part, are built on one side of the valley basin, then on the opposite side and further up the road, above the resort, lie a few more homes, and Redford’s ranch. This is his view from that property, and “Timp” is generating it’s own haze cloud as extremely cold air circulates around it. Actually, this is the view from the Redford Ranch guest house, where I am invited to stay on my first visit. The picture that is the banner for this blog, is the road into the property after a good snowfall the night before. Do I ski, or do I shoot?
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Thursday, August 16, 2018
Sundance #5: At the time of my Artist-In-Residence at Robert Redford’s Sundance, the “resort” and cottages are new, but the ski area has long been a favorite of locals, and the college students from BYU in nearby, Provo. There are an increasing number of services at the base of the ski mountain, but there is only one small hut at the top of the lift, and nothing in between. The hut is like a clubhouse on a good ski day. It is small, so it fills quickly, and the demand for food is greater than the kitchen can supply, so if the weather is nice, they take food outside and grill. Everybody, suns, drinks, and parties. Over the several years of my visits, I will enjoy the summit hut in several ways. I will camp in it overnight for a spectacular dusk-to-dawn shoot. I will also arrive at the hut early one morning after a DEEP POWDER storm, to find the bar scene from Star Wars, waiting for the ski patrol to open the slopes so they could all jump into the bottomless white. Some skiers actually had snorkels!
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Thursday, August 9, 2018
Sundance #4: Reversing the view from the previous post takes in the entire basin occupied by the Sundance ski area, cottages, and private homes. It is a small, “family-style,” ski resort that Redford has purchased, and he is adding a few small buildings around the base area. The true magnificence of the setting, however, is Mt. Timpanogos, the tall, broad peak on the skyline to the left in this picture. Scale is difficult to read here, you can barely see all the skiers standing at the base ski lift on the right. So the actual face of “Timp” is far more impressive from other locations, as you will eventually discover in this blog. For the moment I am just trying to orient you to the area. The ski slopes run up to the left. Redford’s home/ranch is out-of-frame to the right, and those tan colored structures that stand out on the hillside, are REALLY nice log “cottages” the resort has built for guests. I will stay in those on most of my visits. The other new structures that have been added include the dance/concert auditorium (where Twyla Tharp is summer Artist-In-Residence), and a very nice small theater, where Redford is thinking about having an intimate film festival. WHAT????
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Thursday, August 2, 2018
Sundance #3: The highway from Provo, through the Provo Canyon, will ultimately take you to the town of Heber City, and on beyond to Deer Valley and Park City. Sundance is one of the most southern ski areas in the Wasatch Range, however, and about half way to Heber, the narrow, steep North Fork canyon road ascends to the west, rising to the Sundance ski area, which sits in a high basin at the foot of Mount Timpanogos. Sundance is small by ski area standards. It was previously a family operation, primarily visited by locals and college students from the Brigham Young University in Provo. A true mom-and-pop operation when Redford (and crew) arrived to shoot the movie, “Jeremiah Johnson.” Redford told me that during that filming, he fell in love with the beauty of Sundance and the surrounding area, so he bought a small ranch,..and then he bought the ski resort. Since then, some homes have been built, some guest lodges have been added, and the main resort has a nice small movie theater, a concert/dance hall, some stores, and a great restaurant. To be clear about scale, and resort size, in this image, the structures you see are private homes. The ski area comes in from top-right, and descends to the left. THAT IS THE ENTIRE SKI AREA! The mountain in the background is NOT part of the resort, and in fact, is on the other side of Provo Canyon.
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Thursday, July 26, 2018
Sundance #2: After hanging up on Robert Redford the first time he calls me, I do finally believe it is actually him when he calls back. Certainly I am surprised to receive the call, since I do not know him, but I am even more surprised that he is asking if I would like to be the Sundance Institute’s first visual Artist-In-Resdence. I am honored to be asked, and VERY interested, but I am also working on a huge book project and numerous magazines stories, and I worry that I cannot be “in-residence” appropriately, for any substantial length of time. As the other artist residencies occur during the summer months, Robert suggests mine could spread over several years, and that way I would have the opportunity to see all four seasons, coming and going, as I have the opportunity. That seems to work for me, so I propose to come for the first time during the approaching winter season, and Robert explains that as part of the residency, Sundance will provide meals and housing, and he wants me to stay at the guesthouse on his ranch my first visit. To get to Sundance, you fly into Salt Lake City, drive south to Provo, and then follow Provo Canyon into the Wasatch Range. The canyon is dramatic, growing ever-narrower beneath towering walls as it proceeds (last post). Considered one of the great fly-fishing streams in America, the Provo River meanders next to the road, and in winter, the canyon does not see much sunlight so it gets VERY cold. The air, being much colder than the flowing river, crystallizes water vapor steaming off the river, and bedecks the trees and shrubs immediately around the river with a dazzling frost display on a regular basis.
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Thursday, July 19, 2018
Sundance #1: In the late summer of 1987, I am very busily working in my studio on numerous stories and projects when the phone rings. The voice tells me, he is Robert Redford. I have never met him, and certainly have no reason to believe the actual Robert Redford would be calling me, so thinking it is a friend pranking me, I simply say, “Sure you are,” and hang up. Some minutes pass and the phone rings again. This time the voice says, “Before you hang up, we have a mutual friend, Eelco Wolf.” Eelco Wolf was a friend, a collector, and a significant representative of Polaroid, so mentioning him gets my attention. “Did I just hang up on Robert Redford?", I ask, which he affirms. The next question is then, “Why are you calling me?” Robert does a lot of work on behalf of the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), with whom I work on the Tongass campaign, so he is aware of the effort I am putting into that, and he suggests I might enjoy “a place to retreat.” He has purchased a small, local ski resort outside of Provo, UT and he has now created a foundation and the Sundance Institute, dedicated to the arts, and in particular film. There have been some writers, filmmakers, and dancers, he has invited to the institute for a residency, but not yet a visual artist, and he wonders if I would like to be the first. What do you think?
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