I'm tremendously honored and excited to announce that the Pinelands Preservation Alliance has invited me to exhibit some of my pine barrens photography at their Headquarters at 17 Pemberton Road
Southampton, NJ. The pictures will be available for sale and will hang from roughly Dec. 5, through the holidays, possibly even into March. At some point down the road there will be an opening reception. I'd love to meet some of you there. This forum has been an enormous influence to me, I thank you all for your knowledge and inspiration. Here's the program and a few samples! You can find more information and photos on http://www.facebook.com/chaseschieferphotography
The Lure of the Land
A photographic journey through the pine barrens, New Jersey’s diverse wilderness of culture and ecology.
Dawn, Edward G. Bevan Wildlife Management Area near the town of Dividing Creek, Cumberland County. A thick layer of advection fog blankets the road, water boatmen churn the rich cedar water of Buckshutem Creek. A powerful and sticky odor of damp pine woods fills the nostrils. A myriad of curious sugar sand roads lead the imagination into thick forest filled with mystifying shapes. Immense squalls of neotropical birdsong meets my ears.
That was how I spent many mornings of my childhood birdwatching with my Father. Thus began my fascination with the Pines. To me, nothing says New Jersey more than the words “Pine Barrens,” a land equally rich with history, ecology, and space, as it is with mystery and allure. When one ventures through the Pinelands, they may feel at once a pull to save, to preserve. It’s impossible to resist the impulse to capture a scene with a photograph. By seizing images through the photograph, preservation begins. With an eye for composition and lighting, preservation forms a link with aesthetics.
The Pinelands enclave of south Jersey is a diverse geographic region steeped in localized culture, tradition, and ecology. The essence of this diversity is the main inspiration of this exhibition. Laid out before you is a pictorial journey that aims to crystalize this intrinsic characteristic through the photograph. We begin with the seemingly endless salt marshes of Manahawkin, to the deep pine and oak woods of Double Trouble State Park, and macro photographs of pitch pines in Greenwood Wildlife Management Area and British soldier lichen on a cedar planked roof in Batsto Village. We then journey to the cultural side and explore the Pine Barrens through the tradition of the cranberry harvest, vernacular structures, and the “artifacts” of landscape transformation at industrial-agricultural sites like Whitesbog.
Video Slideshow -
Southampton, NJ. The pictures will be available for sale and will hang from roughly Dec. 5, through the holidays, possibly even into March. At some point down the road there will be an opening reception. I'd love to meet some of you there. This forum has been an enormous influence to me, I thank you all for your knowledge and inspiration. Here's the program and a few samples! You can find more information and photos on http://www.facebook.com/chaseschieferphotography
The Lure of the Land
A photographic journey through the pine barrens, New Jersey’s diverse wilderness of culture and ecology.
Dawn, Edward G. Bevan Wildlife Management Area near the town of Dividing Creek, Cumberland County. A thick layer of advection fog blankets the road, water boatmen churn the rich cedar water of Buckshutem Creek. A powerful and sticky odor of damp pine woods fills the nostrils. A myriad of curious sugar sand roads lead the imagination into thick forest filled with mystifying shapes. Immense squalls of neotropical birdsong meets my ears.
That was how I spent many mornings of my childhood birdwatching with my Father. Thus began my fascination with the Pines. To me, nothing says New Jersey more than the words “Pine Barrens,” a land equally rich with history, ecology, and space, as it is with mystery and allure. When one ventures through the Pinelands, they may feel at once a pull to save, to preserve. It’s impossible to resist the impulse to capture a scene with a photograph. By seizing images through the photograph, preservation begins. With an eye for composition and lighting, preservation forms a link with aesthetics.
The Pinelands enclave of south Jersey is a diverse geographic region steeped in localized culture, tradition, and ecology. The essence of this diversity is the main inspiration of this exhibition. Laid out before you is a pictorial journey that aims to crystalize this intrinsic characteristic through the photograph. We begin with the seemingly endless salt marshes of Manahawkin, to the deep pine and oak woods of Double Trouble State Park, and macro photographs of pitch pines in Greenwood Wildlife Management Area and British soldier lichen on a cedar planked roof in Batsto Village. We then journey to the cultural side and explore the Pine Barrens through the tradition of the cranberry harvest, vernacular structures, and the “artifacts” of landscape transformation at industrial-agricultural sites like Whitesbog.
Video Slideshow -