Park Place: Out West

Author:   David Heberlein
Publisher:   George F. Thompson
ISBN:  

9781938086946


Pages:   104
Publication Date:   31 May 2023
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Park Place: Out West


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Overview

The National Park Service was established by an act of Congress in 1916 to “preserve unimpaired the natural and cultural resources and values of the National Park System for the enjoyment, education, and inspiration of this and future generations.” This directive to protect wilderness yet provide accessibility to it without somehow compromising the integrity of the natural resources seems to be a self-fulfilling contradiction and an arena for conflicting priorities. In _Park Place,_ photographer David Heberlein explores the tension between access and enjoyment and preservation of America’s public lands. From 1992 to 2019, he traveled throughout the American West and visited thirty-five national parks, monuments, and recreation areas. His stunning photographs, made in the course of his many journeys, document the human presence within the national parks and monuments of the American West. They allude to human influence both through the marks we make on the land – whether temporary or permanent – and through the presence of visitors who appear in numerous shapes and sizes performing a variety of familiar sightseeing activities. These shifting scenarios provide compelling photographic documentation of the multiple roles that national parks and monuments play and the ongoing need to balance the human impact on nature with the preservation of wild places. _Park Place_ features sixty-four duotone photographs by David Heberlein along with an introductory essay by the photographer and an afterword. It promises to be a welcome addition to a longstanding tradition of artists, writers, and photographers heading out West to see and explore and interpret America’s national treasures.

Full Product Details

Author:   David Heberlein
Publisher:   George F. Thompson
Imprint:   George F. Thompson
ISBN:  

9781938086946


ISBN 10:   1938086945
Pages:   104
Publication Date:   31 May 2023
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

"""...the whole book has a witty spirit, which lifts it above the great boring mass of calendar-ready nature photography. Throw in a nice feel for serendipitous composition, and the book can surprise. Pictures from Death Valley and Mount St. Helens, for example, layer odd shapes across space with Friedlanderish precision. The printing is great, and the production is top-notch.""--Blake Andrews ""Up Photographers"" ""For all of us, these photographs are part of a vast record of how our national lands have looked and they enter a larger dialogue that is likely to continue in words and images for many years to come.""-- ""photo-eye"" ""Especially and unreservedly recommended for personal, professional, community, and academic library American Photography collections... [this] will prove to be a welcome addition to a longstanding tradition of artists, writers--as well as amateur and professional photographers heading out West to see and explore and interpret America's national treasures.""-- ""Midwest Book Review"" ""Over many years, I've watched David Heberlein patiently pursue a visual examination of a particular western place. The idea of those places as preserved acreage of wilderness runs counter to the position of them as theme parks. Within that dichotomy Heberlein has focused on the 'act of looking' offering moments of quiet discovery and wry incongruities. That he has accomplished this with grace and insight is a testament to his photographic skills and his tenacity.""--Wayne Gudmundson is Professor of Photography at Minnesota State University ""It is, perhaps, one of the most enjoyable books of American nature photography ever made... Stunningly printed, and with great attention to toning, it at times feels like somebody gave Ansel Adams a Xanax.""-- ""New York Journal of Books"" ""David Heberlein's Park Place: Out West offers a fresh meditation on the complex relationship between humans and what we term 'wilderness.' This quest for proximity to the natural world has led us to seek out the wild, yet we do not wish to leave behind our creature comforts. Heberlein's wry photographs reveal our longing to be a part of, instead of apart from, nature. Often cloaked in humor or irony, these images are emblematic of our hunger for natural vistas coupled with our collective fear of destroying the planet, as if to experience it for the last time.""--Michelle Van Parys, Professor of Art Emerita, College of Charleston, and author of The Way Out West: Desert Landscapes ""The American wilderness, if it ever truly existed, is long gone. The health of planet Earth has been severely compromised by human actions, but, as seminal landscape photographer Mark Klett has reminded viewers for decades, there is still so much beauty. And the human desire to go adventuring and to experience the wonders of the world with our own eyes and feet continues on. Especially if there is good parking and decent restrooms. Heberlein's elegant and gently humorous photographs wonderfully capture the moment in which we find ourselves, burning fossil fuel to get out into the landscape and take selfies in sanctioned scenic spots. Yes, the saguaros are interspersed with utility poles, but he doesn't begrudge us the thrill of discovery on our own terms. Park Place: Out West is a distinctive contribution to the ongoing dialog about the human relationship with nature and a reminder to all of us to get up off the couch and see what's out there!""--Katherine Ware, Curator of Photography, New Mexico Museum of Art, and author of Man Ray, 1890-1976 and Earth Now: American Photographers and the Environment"


"""Especially and unreservedly recommended for personal, professional, community, and academic library American Photography collections... [this] will prove to be a welcome addition to a longstanding tradition of artists, writers--as well as amateur and professional photographers heading out West to see and explore and interpret America's national treasures.""-- ""Midwest Book Review"" ""Over many years, I've watched David Heberlein patiently pursue a visual examination of a particular western place. The idea of those places as preserved acreage of wilderness runs counter to the position of them as theme parks. Within that dichotomy Heberlein has focused on the 'act of looking' offering moments of quiet discovery and wry incongruities. That he has accomplished this with grace and insight is a testament to his photographic skills and his tenacity.""--Wayne Gudmundson is Professor of Photography at Minnesota State University ""It is, perhaps, one of the most enjoyable books of American nature photography ever made... Stunningly printed, and with great attention to toning, it at times feels like somebody gave Ansel Adams a Xanax.""-- ""New York Journal of Books"" ""David Heberlein's Park Place: Out West offers a fresh meditation on the complex relationship between humans and what we term 'wilderness.' This quest for proximity to the natural world has led us to seek out the wild, yet we do not wish to leave behind our creature comforts. Heberlein's wry photographs reveal our longing to be a part of, instead of apart from, nature. Often cloaked in humor or irony, these images are emblematic of our hunger for natural vistas coupled with our collective fear of destroying the planet, as if to experience it for the last time.""--Michelle Van Parys, Professor of Art Emerita, College of Charleston, and author of The Way Out West: Desert Landscapes ""The American wilderness, if it ever truly existed, is long gone. The health of planet Earth has been severely compromised by human actions, but, as seminal landscape photographer Mark Klett has reminded viewers for decades, there is still so much beauty. And the human desire to go adventuring and to experience the wonders of the world with our own eyes and feet continues on. Especially if there is good parking and decent restrooms. Heberlein's elegant and gently humorous photographs wonderfully capture the moment in which we find ourselves, burning fossil fuel to get out into the landscape and take selfies in sanctioned scenic spots. Yes, the saguaros are interspersed with utility poles, but he doesn't begrudge us the thrill of discovery on our own terms. Park Place: Out West is a distinctive contribution to the ongoing dialog about the human relationship with nature and a reminder to all of us to get up off the couch and see what's out there!""--Katherine Ware, Curator of Photography, New Mexico Museum of Art, and author of Man Ray, 1890-1976 and Earth Now: American Photographers and the Environment"


Over many years, I've watched David Heberlein patiently pursue a visual examination of a particular western place. The idea of those places as preserved acreage of wilderness runs counter to the position of them as theme parks. Within that dichotomy Heberlein has focused on the 'act of looking' offering moments of quiet discovery and wry incongruities. That he has accomplished this with grace and insight is a testament to his photographic skills and his tenacity. --Wayne Gudmundson is Professor of Photography at Minnesota State University David Heberlein's Park Place: Out West offers a fresh meditation on the complex relationship between humans and what we term 'wilderness.' This quest for proximity to the natural world has led us to seek out the wild, yet we do not wish to leave behind our creature comforts. Heberlein's wry photographs reveal our longing to be a part of, instead of apart from, nature. Often cloaked in humor or irony, these images are emblematic of our hunger for natural vistas coupled with our collective fear of destroying the planet, as if to experience it for the last time. --Michelle Van Parys, Professor of Art Emerita, College of Charleston, and author of The Way Out West: Desert Landscapes The American wilderness, if it ever truly existed, is long gone. The health of planet Earth has been severely compromised by human actions, but, as seminal landscape photographer Mark Klett has reminded viewers for decades, there is still so much beauty. And the human desire to go adventuring and to experience the wonders of the world with our own eyes and feet continues on. Especially if there is good parking and decent restrooms. Heberlein's elegant and gently humorous photographs wonderfully capture the moment in which we find ourselves, burning fossil fuel to get out into the landscape and take selfies in sanctioned scenic spots. Yes, the saguaros are interspersed with utility poles, but he doesn't begrudge us the thrill of discovery on our own terms. Park Place: Out West is a distinctive contribution to the ongoing dialog about the human relationship with nature and a reminder to all of us to get up off the couch and see what's out there! --Katherine Ware, Curator of Photography, New Mexico Museum of Art, and author of Man Ray, 1890-1976 and Earth Now: American Photographers and the Environment


"""For all of us, these photographs are part of a vast record of how our national lands have looked and they enter a larger dialogue that is likely to continue in words and images for many years to come.""-- ""photo-eye"" ""Especially and unreservedly recommended for personal, professional, community, and academic library American Photography collections... [this] will prove to be a welcome addition to a longstanding tradition of artists, writers--as well as amateur and professional photographers heading out West to see and explore and interpret America's national treasures.""-- ""Midwest Book Review"" ""Over many years, I've watched David Heberlein patiently pursue a visual examination of a particular western place. The idea of those places as preserved acreage of wilderness runs counter to the position of them as theme parks. Within that dichotomy Heberlein has focused on the 'act of looking' offering moments of quiet discovery and wry incongruities. That he has accomplished this with grace and insight is a testament to his photographic skills and his tenacity.""--Wayne Gudmundson is Professor of Photography at Minnesota State University ""It is, perhaps, one of the most enjoyable books of American nature photography ever made... Stunningly printed, and with great attention to toning, it at times feels like somebody gave Ansel Adams a Xanax.""-- ""New York Journal of Books"" ""David Heberlein's Park Place: Out West offers a fresh meditation on the complex relationship between humans and what we term 'wilderness.' This quest for proximity to the natural world has led us to seek out the wild, yet we do not wish to leave behind our creature comforts. Heberlein's wry photographs reveal our longing to be a part of, instead of apart from, nature. Often cloaked in humor or irony, these images are emblematic of our hunger for natural vistas coupled with our collective fear of destroying the planet, as if to experience it for the last time.""--Michelle Van Parys, Professor of Art Emerita, College of Charleston, and author of The Way Out West: Desert Landscapes ""The American wilderness, if it ever truly existed, is long gone. The health of planet Earth has been severely compromised by human actions, but, as seminal landscape photographer Mark Klett has reminded viewers for decades, there is still so much beauty. And the human desire to go adventuring and to experience the wonders of the world with our own eyes and feet continues on. Especially if there is good parking and decent restrooms. Heberlein's elegant and gently humorous photographs wonderfully capture the moment in which we find ourselves, burning fossil fuel to get out into the landscape and take selfies in sanctioned scenic spots. Yes, the saguaros are interspersed with utility poles, but he doesn't begrudge us the thrill of discovery on our own terms. Park Place: Out West is a distinctive contribution to the ongoing dialog about the human relationship with nature and a reminder to all of us to get up off the couch and see what's out there!""--Katherine Ware, Curator of Photography, New Mexico Museum of Art, and author of Man Ray, 1890-1976 and Earth Now: American Photographers and the Environment"


Author Information

David Heberlein is a professor emeritus from the University of Wisconsin-River Falls, where he taught art and photography for thirty-three years. His photographs are in the permanent collections of the Minnesota History Center; Minneapolis Institute of Art; Plains Art Museum in Moorhead, Minnesota; Frederick R. Weisman Art Museum in Minneapolis; and Wisconsin Historical Society. His photographs have also appeared in numerous publications, among them EXTRAordinary—American Place in Recent Photography (Madison Art Center, 2001); Wisconsin Then and Now, the Wisconsin Sesquicentennial Rephotographic Project (University of Wisconsin Press, 2001); Minnesota In Our Time: A Photographic Portrait (Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2000); Metroscapes (University of Washington Press/Weisman Art Museum, 1998); and Another Look: Wisconsin Photographs Past and Present (Wisconsin State Historical Society Press, 1998). His Website is davidheberlein.com.

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