West Slope Photo Project
Artist Statement
The West Slope project was formed from a culmination of events.
The imagery I created during these six years didn’t come from any plan of ever doing anything with them, let alone a fine art project. The imagery I created was simply an impulsive reaction to documenting the natural beauty I witnessed all around me. They are vignettes of the wild, natural, world I connected with emotionally and spiritually.
I hadn’t taken a single photograph in several years. I had spent nearly half my life trying to make the art form I loved be my profession. It wasn’t that I lacked talent, training or effort. It was simply the fact that I was more of an artist than a businessman. So at the age of 30 I transitioned to a career as a graphic designer and art director. As I focused on this new path my photography took a back seat and I became very critical of the photographs I made. As I focused on my new path my edge for the capturing photographs also faded and eventually I stopped picking up the camera.
When I moved to the western slope of Colorado I was so inspired by the people and places around me that I started taking pictures again. The tool I inevitably defaulted to use to capture my amazing and new-to-me backyard was my iphone camera. In hindsight this makes sense to me. Because I was subconsciously making a decision to not take any picture taking too serious. After a few years capturing images with my iphone of my jaunts and adventures in this new backyard. I decided to look back through the images. In doing so I noticed something about them. I noticed that the freedom I found using the camera on my phone had allowed me to be free of my own biases, criticisms and constraints and in the process I had learned to see creatively in a new way. Portraying what I saw in a way that is better connected to my emotional response to the landscapes I was observing. A new way of seeing arose that showed expression and emotion to that beauty.
July 2018
Marion Gulch, Thompson Divide.
Summer storm, Grand Mesa, Colorado.
Mill Creek Trail, Telluride, Colorado.
Fall, Avalanche Creek, Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness.
Mount Sopris
Avalanche Creek, Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness.
Dawn Patrol
Fall Aspen leaves, Mt. Wilson, Colorado.
Fall, Avalanche Creek, Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness.
Telluride, Colorado.
Avalanche Creek, Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness.
Ophir, Colorado
Wetlands, Colorado River.
Hayden Peak tour.
Cattails, Winter Solstice, Basalt Mountain
Flattops Wilderness, Colorado.
Trail 1119, Flattops Wilderness, Colorado.
Mt. Marcelina, Kebler Pass, Colorado.
Prince Creek and Mt. Sopris.
Grandstaff Canyon, Moab, Utah.
Long Canyon Overview, Utah.
Dolores River, UT.
Day Canyon, Utah.
Basalt Mountain
Summer, Kebler Pass, Colorado