About Me

My name is Michael Morris, I am a photographer who came to photography later in life.  I started with digital and found it unrewarding so after a short time with MF, I moved to LF 4X5.  Almost everything I do now is large format B&W.  I am working to improve my technical and artistic skills constantly.  Living in Phoenix, I have access to some very good photographers who are willing to help and teach.  I am on a journey exploring photography, the US, and myself to some extent.  Along with my wife Mary, we are traveling the US together, cameras follow us everywhere and as we travel, this BLOG is updated.  It is very much a journal of my journey with ramblings about everything from the photograph I took while traveling, to the ah-ha moments when something new is grasped.

The old masters work is enthralling to me and I spend a lot of time looking at their work as well as most other work I have access to.  

 

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Entries in travel (7)

Tuesday
Mar162010

More Fun in New Mexico

 Sunday was a snow day.  We woke up to 2 -3 inches on the ground but it seems places like Aztec had a bit more.  We went to Aztec and then took a long drive up to Durango and then toward Cortez.  We did a bit of photography at Aztec and I made one in the mountains near Durango but overall it was a drive and look day.

Yesterday, we woke up to heavy, freezing fog.  We went for a walk by the Animas River and did a bit of fog photography.  There is very little opportunity for shooting in fog in Phoenix so we took advantage of it.  Then we drove back to Bisti and did another hike.  As you can see below, I carried the 8X10 this time.  I made a few photos there.  We hiked another 4+ miles there so all told, we have hiked about 11 - 12 miles since we started on the trip.

We were planning to drive to Canyon de Chelly this morning but have decided to extend our stay here for another day.  There are no clouds and we seem to have developed a leak in the plumbing in the trailer so that needs to be addressed today.  As long as the plumbing problem can be repaired today, we will be heading toward Canyon de Chelly tomorrow morning.  If we have a chance, we may go to Angel Peak today, more for the hike than the photos.

The photos here are compliments of MAry from her Leica digital.

Monday
Jan042010

Return to Death Valley

 This was an interesting trip for several reasons.  Mary and I have been making journeys between Christmas and New Year's for 3 years now.  We do not celebrate New Year's in any traditional form so this is a nice way for us to celebrate.  We are somewhere we choose to be, doing what we love to do, together.  Rather a nice way to spend the changing of the year. 

This year we had our oldest son and his family here for Christmas so we could not leave on the 26th as usual, but we left on the 29th.  We pulled the trailer to Death Valley, arrived mid-day on the 30th and quickly set up and went out to photograph.  We stayed in the Furnace Creek campground which is a nice campground but it has no hookups, so we were dry-camping for 3 days.  It was the first time we have dry-camped and it worked out pretty good.  

The day of the 30th started out as thick overcast but had begun to break up by the time we were ready to go out.  It was a very good day to shoot except for the chill wind that was blowing.  We drove the Artist's Drive and photographed there a little before heading back to the trailer to have supper.

On the 31st we shot early morning light at Devil's Cornfield then headed into Beaty to find some cell signal and buy gas.  In the park the gas was almost $4.00/gal.  We then stopped by Rhyolote and then drove Titus Canyon back to the park.

Both of those are great places to photograph.  The bottle house in Rhyolite was open so I went in and made a couple of photos of the walls.  Then we went up to the caboose and made a couple more, had lunch and then headed toward Titus Canyon.  We took most of the remainder of the day to drive Titus Canyon.  We did go out and shoot the blue moon but alas, I mis-calculated the exposure and all of those shots were underexposed to the point of not useable.

New Year's day was cold, windy (no too bad), and total gray overcast.  There were no shadows whatsoever.  We went out for sunrise but made no pictures because the day started with a gradual lightening, no sun was visible.  So we took off for a drive in the Panamint Range.  It was a nice drive, we explored a site along the way and that is where the truck below was found.  We droe the road South then took the road in the Panamint Valley back to 189 before returning to the trailer.  

The next day was much better, we shot early morning light at Zabriskie Point.  It was another instance of most people shooting color and ignoring the light and shadows.  We got there and before long it was crowded, there must have been 50 tripods lined up on the edge waiting for sunrise.  It was getting lighter and then, before the sun actually made an appearance, most of the people were leaving.  Someone once told me that the best colors is before the sun comes up.  I have a bit of trouble believing that is the case, but for me, I want shadows, highlights, some bold definitions rather than color.  Even when shooting color, I look for interesting light in landscapes.  Some things work well in flat light but IMO, landscapes in flat light are a waste of time, to shoot and to view.  The photo above is one that was made that morning from Zabriskie Point.

After going back to the trailer, we packed up and headed for home.  I wanted to do Devils Golf Course and the Salt Flats but we simply ran out of time.  The forecast for the day was for no clouds at all and it was shaping up for a day of very harsh light.

We found some interesting buildings in the Panamint Range that I would like to return to and shoot.  I realized that when we travel I need to start keeping a journal that is searchable.  Talking about the different things in an area what worked, what didn't, what was skipped, and what could call us back.  It must be searchable and easy to maintain.  Not sure of what tool to use yet.

Tuesday
Dec292009

Death Valley

The kids are gone, on their way back home.  I had an acute case of kid overdose but loved seeing them again.  We will miss them until we get another overdose.

 Yesterday we brought the trailer here to prepare for a short trip to Death Valley.  We leave this afternoon and will spend a night on the road.  We hope to arrive there early afternoon tomorrow.  It has been 2 years since we were there last.  We had about 1 1/2 days there then.  This will not be a lot more, but last time we slept in Lone Pine (> 100 miles away), this time out trailer will be parked at Furnace Creek so we can spend more time enjoying ourselves.

Last trip was a few months before I started shooting large format and my vision has changed quite a bit since then.  It will be interesting to see how I perceive it now.  Returning to places a few years later often is a very good way for you to see the differences in your vision and to mark your growth.

We have quite a bit more prep to do before we can pull out but we hope to leave here around noon.

I am looking forward to Rhyolite, Titus Canyon, Devils Haystacks, Artists Palette, and DUNES!!! 

Tuesday
Sep152009

US395 Trip

On our Northern CA trip we came east in the last couple of days and parked the trailer at Bridgeport, CA for 2 nights before heading home.  Starting on Oct 1 we have a 10 day period in which to travel.  We have decided to travel US395 focusing on the areas from Lone Pine to Bridgeport. This is an area which demand superlatives.  Ansel Adams traveled the road more than once and made some great pictures in the area.  As we drove south from Bridgeport last trip, I was excited to return and take time to explore the area.  I am not sure how we will do this.  We may park in Lee Vining and just see the Northern areas or to try to move the trailer during the trip.  Either way could work but I have more research to do before making a choice.  We drove by Mono Lake last trip and I would like to spend some time there but it has been photographed so much, saying something new there would be difficult.

I really wish to see the Bristlecone Pine in the White Mountains and they are a 2+ hour trip from Lee Vining.  We may end up doing Lee Vining for a while, then moving to Bishop.  In any case, I will post about the planing as well as the trip itself.

 

Tuesday
Sep082009

Thoughts From the Trip

 After a few days the impressions and learnings form the trip are making more sense now.  It seems strange to me that there are feelings associated with events that are resolved after a while, then usually there is understanding.

It was a great honor for my first gallery hanging to be among such good work.  Most of the work in that exhibition is very good and I would be proud to hang it in my home.  There is some very good work in the f/stop Cafe.  Square B&W prints of nature.  Those were very pleasing and we spent a considerable amount of time viewing them.

There is another gallery where they hang a single photographer's work.  The one hanging there last week did not impress me.  I appreciate art that is done well.  Where effort is placed on composition, light, technical correctness, etc.  As I have said many times before, if you are going to step outside the realm of technical correctness, is should be with a purpose.  To blur or defocus just because that is your style seems so silly to me.  If the blur or defocus does not somehow improve the communication it is nothing more than a gimmick.  Perhaps I am a bit stringent with that but it is the way I think.  One of the solo exhibitions was a small body of work that had mangled, dead animals and other disturbing images, all out of focus.  I dod not like the subject matter to begin with but I can get past that if it was done well.  The senseless blurs were nothing more than an attempt to be different.  It is something that I expect to be found in trained artists.  Striving to be different and break the rules.  But I( will assert, breaking the rules is fine when there is a reason.  Poorly composed, out of focus photographs are not a style, they are a statement of a lack of talent or experience combined with poor judgement.

 There is another gallery that shares the building with the center.  There are several studios for rent upstairs.  One of the artists sells what he calls photographs,  They are all heavily processed.  All that he had there were flowers and all processed the same way.  I contest that they are photographs because the processing removes all detail and block up parts.  You can see that it started out as a photograph but is nor digital art.  I can see this as a valid technique but it is no longer photography.  The obvious purpose is to produce art that people will buy for their homes.  I got the impression that he is successful at that.  One thing that I did notice however was that no piece stood out, they were all so similar that I was left with an impression of the style but no specific image.  I mention this because all the great artists I have ever studied have a distinctive style (or styles) along with multiple pieces that stand out and live in my mind.

 In the world of art there are too many people who put too much effort in being different, not because they are different but because they want people to take notice of them.  I have seen many examples of this and to me it seems silly to strive to be something you are not.  But then, I will probably never have notice taken of my work because my focus is to find what I see and shoot that in a way that communicates to me what I saw in the image.  In other words, simple, appealing, communicative work.  There seems to be such a limited appreciation for that these days.

The 2 photos in this post are from out trip last weekend.  The first was taken beside the Old Fall River Road in Rocky Mountain National Park, the other was taken in Bluff, UT.