Mitch Dobrowner: Storms
Aperture
Aperture
6th January 2014
United States
General
Non Fiction
Individual photographers
779.092
Hardback
96
Width 355mm, Height 245mm
Mitch Dobrowner has been chasing storms since 2009, traveling throughout Western and Midwestern America to capture nature in its full fury. Making photographs in the tradition of Ansel Adams, to the highest standard of craftsmanship, Dobrowner creates extraordinary black-and-white images of monsoons, tornados and massive thunderstorms conjure awe and wonder. As Dobrowner states in the book's afterword, "I experience storms as living beings, organic things, both rational and unpredictable in the way they look, how they move, grow and die. Every storm is different; each has a unique character. My job is to capture a 'portrait' of each storm I encounter, an image that does each one justice as if the storm was a person." Dobrowner's photographs been published widely by magazines, including "National Geographic," "Time" and the "Los Angeles Times." They are introduced here by Gretel Ehrlich, the American travel writer and poet, who creates her own images, in words, that evoke the stormy spirit of the American West.
Mitch Dobrowner (born in Bethpage, New York, 1956) derives his inspiration from the natural world, and from the masters of landscape photography who have captured it before him, in particular, Ansel Adams and Minor White. Dobrowner began photographing the landscape of the American West in 2005, and since then, storms have become one of his main subjects. Although Dobrowner's work is widely exhibited, collected and published in periodicals, this is the first book featuring his storm photographs.
This guy doesn't need a weatherman: Throughout the western U.S., he captures electric thunderstorms, ominious funnel clouds, and outright tornadoes in luminous, Ansel Adamsian black and white.--Jack Crager"American Photo" (11/01/2013)
Dobowner aims to capture storms and other massive landscapes, like "Nibiru Stone," above, a large piece of ice sitting on the Icelandic shoreline, as "living beings, both rational and unpredictable in the way they look, how they move, grow, and die," he says.--Meg Ryan Heery"American Photo" (01/01/2014)
Mitch Dobrowner derives his inspiration from the natural world, and from the masters of landscape photography who have captured it before him, in particular Ansel Adams and Minor White. Dobrowner began one of his main subjects, photographing the landscapes of the American West in 2005, and since then, storms have become one of his main subjects. Although widely exhibited, collected, and published in periodicals, this is the first book featuring Dobrowners storm photographs. Mitch Dobrowner derives his inspiration from the natural world, and from the masters of landscape photography who have captured it before him, in particular Ansel Adams and Minor White. Dobrowner began one of his main subjects, photographing the landscapes of the American West in 2005, and since then, storms have become one of his main subjects. Although widely exhibited, collected, and published in periodicals, this is the first book featuring Dobrowners storm photographs. Gretel Ehrlich is the author of fourteen books of narrative essays, novels, poems, and travel writing, including Facing the Wave: A Journey in the Wake of a Tsunami (2013), This Cold Heaven: Seven Seasons in Greenland (2001), and A Match to the Heart (1994). She is the recipient of many awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship and the PEN Henry David Thoreau Award. Ehrlich was struck by lightning in 1991 in Wyoming.