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Natural
Connections introduces
for the first time a new process in the reproduction of photographslaser
Silver-Lit Tones, a variation on the tri-tone process using silver
ink as the third color. In Natural Connections, we invite you to
explore the vision of a remarkable photographer and to experience photographs
reproduced with unsurpassed fidelity. With this book, we have attempted
to extend the boundaries of what is possible in the reproduction of photographs.
Having come to photography after beginning a career as a painter, Paula
Chamlee brings to her photographs a unique perspective and an original
vision. Few women have attempted to photograph the American Landscape
in the classic, large-format tradition pioneered by Edward Weston and
Ansel Adams, and none so successfully as Paula Chamlee. Her photographs,
sensuous and lyrical, subtle and complex, transcend their recognizable
subject matter while remaining deeply rooted in her profound connection
to the natural world. Through Chamlee's photographs and writings in Natural
Connections, we are absorbed into her experience with the American
landscape, and we are led to examine our own connections. Chamlee's photographs
are included in numerous collections, both public and private, in the
United States and abroad.
Every detail of production of this exquisite book was supervised by the
photographer. Produced to the exacting standards that are a hallmark of
Lodima Press, this monograph reproduces Chamlee's contact prints with
astounding fidelity to the delicacy and luminosity of the original photographs.
The reproductions are printed on heavy cover stock by Gardner Lithograph
using their newly developed processlaser Silver-Lit Tones. Natural
Connections marks the first use of this superior technology in the
reproduction of photographs. The reproductions are from 8x10, 5x7, and
4x5-inch contact prints and are presented one to a page with blank-facing
pages so that the viewer can fully experience the rewards of contemplative
and prolonged looking. A sturdy French-fold dust jacket protects and compliments
the elegance of this fine book.
Interwoven throughout the book, accompanying the photographs are selections
from Chamlee's journalsaccounts of her experiences and insights
while traveling and photographingadding another dimension to our
understanding of this artist and her work. The introductory essay by the
award-winning art critic and historian, Estelle Jussim, reveals further
insights into the development and creative life of the woman behind these
extraordinary photographs. Altogether, the photographs, the writing, and
the production values in Natural Connections combine to make a
book that will be a valuable addition to photography and art book collections
everywhere.
Hardcover
Edition $60
Special
Limited Edition $200
The Special Limited
Edition, limited to 250 copies, is signed, numbered, custom-bound, and slipcased.
It was originally offered with the purchaser's choice of any 8x10-inch image
from the book at a price that was substantially lower than the price for a
photograph alone. A limited number of these special limited edition books,
without a print, are available for $200.
From the essay. The Evocative Art of Paula Chamlee by Estelle
Jussim
A passion for primal nature
informs Paula Chamlee's brilliant landscapes. The intensity of her vision
reverberates like solemn and glorious music. . . . Her connections to nature
are sensual, strongly emotional, aesthetically sophisticated.
As Chamlee moves about with her 8x10 camera, shifting its cumbersome bulk
here and there to find the most exacting composition on the ground glass,
it is the forms that move with her, until the real and the abstract rhythmically
connect across space and time.
Chamlee's photographs are subtle, full of complex relationships and fragile
tensions. . . . There is not only complex subtlety, but it is coupled
with an organization of the picture space that invites the contemplationthe
investigationof every inch, a long, slow looking. Each moment of
looking at a Chamlee landscape delivers more and more depth, more and
more levels of visual meaning, and, above all, a sense of her connectedness
to the nature she chooses to represent.
.
A Selection
From Chamlee's Journal Entries
From the smallest discernible
detail to the biggest view, all are in a kind of harmony and natural
balance too large and too perfect fore me to comprehend. From the tiniest
seed and insect to the largest mountain range or river, everything moves
in curving, meandering, pulsating rhythms that reveal a commom denominatorthe
energetic force that formed all and continues to form and shape every
natural thing. Nothing is the same, yet everything is clearly connected.
In the airfrom Portland,
Oregon to Dallas, Texas, May 30, 1990
I continue to be amazed at how the lens and ground glass find my pictures
for me. It is almost as if pre-selecting subject matter gets in the
way. I realize that I seldom make photographs of what originally caught
my eye and caused me to set up my camera. It would never be as thrilling
if I knew in advance what would happen. Most of the time, much nicer
things happen when there is the possibility of chance discovery. Subject
matter becomes abstraction. Abstraction becomes a new adventure.
Sucia Island, Washington, June
12, 1990
We walked out over the sea of white sandstone, wandering, lingering,
enjoying its stark, quiet beauty, its waves of massive spaces between us
and the point high over the river. We walked to the edge and sat on a peninsula
of rock, listening to the birds far below, their songs echoing and clear
between the river and high canyon walls. The river is wide here, and yet
we could hardly hear it below us. It is so peaceful in this remarkable place.
This strange desert-land of boulders and rock faces continually reminding
that they have lived for millions of yearsbeing shaped, layered, broken,
eroded, pushed up, melted, compressed, expandedpersisting and evolving,
surviving through ages longer than the mind can comprehend. We are just
passing through this time with no more significance than a single gnat,
capable of much harm and of little or no benefit to this fragile environment.
White Rim Trail, Utah, June
17, 1993
Reviewer Comments
Working in an almost exclusively
male tradition that stretches back to Watkins, through Weston, and up to
Michael A. Smith, Chamlee has created a body of work which is different:
quieter, often more intimate, and more spiritual, though just as magnificent.
. . . With images that are in turns graphically striking, graceful, and
breathtaking, Paula Chamlee succeeds in renewing our awe of the natural
beauty to be found in our own country.
Stephen Perloff, Photo Review
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