Thursday, December 24, 2020

California Redwoods Daguerreotype Trip

 Redwood Daguerreotypes


  This trip has been waiting in the wings ever since I made my first successful daguerreotype in the redwoods two years ago.  I actually planned on going as early as August this year, but one project after another, including the cats, kept getting in the way, and for months I kept pushing it back by a couple weeks.   When I got tired of pushing it back, weather moved into the region, bringing with it two weeks of solid rain.  That’s when the trip to the always reliably dry desert to shoot those petroglyphs happened.  Luckily a window of solidly good weather opened up not long after coming back from the desert, and I was on the road again. 


  23 years ago I traveled up to this same spot in Arcata CA for the first time.   It was the first stop of what would become a life changing adventure.  This was less than three years after I arrived to US as a refugee, and at the time I was working nights in fast food places, while attending community college full time and getting ready to try and transfer to UCSD with biochemistry major.  Being amid those woods for the first few days of the trip made me realize that my life must be dedicated to my first love of photography, and subsequent travel up and down the west coast set that in stone.  Upon returning, I switched my major to photography, and started the long and winding road of working in various photo businesses in order to appreciate and learn all various aspects of this noble art.   So this forest always held a special place in my heart.


  Redwood trees are incredible. They are the tallest trees on Earth, some reaching well over 300ft, and they can live past 3000 years, with trunks that are over 20ft in diameter.  Their bark is dark red, and their enormous branches, located only at top part of the tree, block out almost all sunlight with dense needles.  In the summer, when it’s 95°F in the town square less than a mile from the forest, as soon as you walk into the woods you want to put on a sweater.  It’s almost always damp in there as well, as redwoods actually get a lot of moisture by trapping coastal fog in the morning, condensing it on needles, and raining it down.  Being among trees that size and of that age really puts things in perspective. 


 Another thing that makes one realize the ravages of history, are the countless enormous burned-out stumps that dot the forest as far as the eye can see.  Those were the real old-timers, the original old growth.  Native never cut those trees, and while considering them sacred, never actually lived within the forest, always in nearby meadows or river valleys. When European settlers arrived, especially starting with 1849 California Gold Rush, there was suddenly a great need for building materials.  Imagine expressions on faces of loggers when they saw that there was a forest that ran for hundreds of miles, with trees so big that you could build 40(!) 5-room homes from one single tree.  Nature is still only rarely a first concern when people do things, and back then it was much less so.  Humans went cutting, and, by the time things slowed down, literally less than 2% of that original forest was left.  At that point, people saw a vast land in front of them, full of giant stumps which no man or machine at that time could uproot.  People wanted that land for agriculture and to graze their cattle on, so they really wanted those stumps gone.  At some point, some mildly bright individual came up with an idea of burning the stumps.   Problem is, redwoods evolved to withstand fires pretty well; their bark is fibrous, and snuffs out the flame by starving it of oxygen, so only extreme and prolonged heat can get through that bark and down to actual wood.  I guess the proposed solution was to try and burn them with root fires, so they would burn from the inside.  The spectacle must have been harrowing, and I can’t imagine how long or fierce those fires raged, but when it was all over, the outer portions of all those stumps still proudly stood; charred tubes 10-20ft tall, many of them wide enough to pitch a tent inside and have a fire next to it.  These ghostly grim reminders of human greed and avarice were also not dead.  You see, when one dies naturally, redwoods sprout new shoots from their roots, as nearby original trunk as possible, so a new forest soon sprung up in the land that people could not tame, and you can see in a few of my plates that old stumps usually have 2-3 new shoots right at their bases.   

  One of the plates also captures a peculiar and beautiful natural phenomenon I was not expecting to see.  Around 2005 or 2006, there was an abnormal for the area weather event, with something akin to a mini tornado forming, and that whipped through the forest pretty strongly.  Redwoods don’t usually fall from wind, but indeed their root systems are actually very shallow, so if strong wind is combined with rain, and the ground is soaked, they can topple over.  Shortly after hearing the news of that storm, I went back there to see the damage for myself.  It was surreal, with devastation visible in every direction. After coming there many times, and being familiar with almost every turn in that lower part of the park, the place looked unrecognizable and totally surreal.  It was like some sort of a lumberyard owed by careless giants, with splintered pieced the size of a train car jetting up in every direction.  Those who wandered in and wanted to go where they always walked freely to, had to climb over and under and around huge trunks and crawl between branches.  It looked like an absolutely impossible cleanup job, but I must say the city did an incredible job, and now it’s hard to tell which logs fell during that storm and which have been there for a century.  A particular scene though struck me as truly symbolic of the resilience of this forest.  One of the largest and tallest of the old burned stumps was crushed and broken by three near-buy younger saplings during that storm, so that was the second time that tree was in danger of meeting its demise.  But no, nature finds a way.  Not all of the roots of the younger trees must have gotten separated from ground, and so when they all of a sudden found themselves in a 45° position, they reorganized their plan for growth, and started sprouting branches all along the top portion of their trunks.  This phenomenon actually gave rise to a form of bonsai called ‘raft style’, and I can’t wait to see what it looks like in 20-30 years.

  Let’s get back to daguerreotypes though, redwoods do tend to get me rambling.  Two years ago, I actually made one of my best plates to date at this same place, but I was not satisfied that it was the only one I secured that time.  I felt that this time, especially after the grueling desert adventure, I was ready.  I’ll say that going from the ultra-bright Arizona desert to redwood forest lighting was extremely challenging, especially seeing how little UV is present that far north and this late in the year.  Humidity was also the exact opposite of the desert, with dew point hitting early, suddenly, and hard, so a couple of my plates suffered from that, but I think in one with the sun peeking through the old burned out log it really worked out splendidly.  I brought two cameras with me, knowing that my exposures were going to be long.  One was my usual Zone VI, with 90, 150, 210, and 400mm lenses, and the other was a fixed lens Burke & James 4x5 Orbitar, with its 65mm Schneider.   Sometimes I would set them both for similar exposures, or I would give the Orbitar such a long exposure that I could finish two plates with a faster lens on Zone VI.  The contrast in that forest is enormous, with deep shadows even midday registering at EV3, and splotchy sunlight getting through the branches unscathed being about EV13 or more.  Below one of the plates I’ve posted a phone pic for comparison.  You can see the camera mid-exposure at the bottom of the frame, and I adjusted all values while still there to match the scene as closely as possible to what it appeared as to the naked eye.  

  I can’t really describe how happy I am with these plates, which are all 4x5in, by the way.  Even the unexpected light leak or two along the bottom edge of some plates somehow doesn’t bother me at the least, when usually I’d be pretty upset about it.   A few of these plates though set my personal best record for now, and outperforming them is what I will work tirelessly at, but I really don’t know how much better they can possibly get.


Plate 1, Stump Fungus Lifting Redwood Branch

Plate 2, Mist in Redwood Forest

Plate 3, Three Giants

Plate 3 being captured

Plate 4, Old Giant

Plate 5, Misty Woods

Plate 6, Redwood Forest Glory

Plate 7, New and Old

Plate 8, Fallen Redwoods With Natural Raft Style Growth

Plate 9, Sun and Burned Stump

Plate 10, Redwoods at Dusk

Plate 11, Tree Trunk Habitat



  All these plates at this point are available for purchase, so feel free to find the contact link here.  At the risk of repeating myself, I will once again state that no digital reproduction on screen or in print can ever come near the beauty and depth of these unique plates.  For example one of the plates below appears a little warmer on the left than on the right.  That’s actually opalescence of that plate playing tricks on copy camera sensor, depending on angle of view and lighting in real life that plate changes hue from purple, to neutral, to golden, so holding it is not something I can ever hope to convey via this modern marvel of communication method.  I do however welcome anyone to contact me, and make an appointment for a private viewing, should you ever find yourself in San Diego.

Anton

Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Petroglyph Daguerreotypes on Daguerre’s Birthday

 Toward the end of November, I went back to one of my favorite places in the desert.  A spot out in the middle of nowhere, with nearest significant human population well over an hour drive away.  A tall cliff overlooks the arid desert plateau there, running for a few hundred yards north to south.  Winds blow tumbleweeds between desert shrubs and over cacti, and aside from lizards and flies it’s rare to see much life.  This wasn’t always the case though.

  Thousands of years ago, beneath that cliff there was a river valley full of life and game, a beautifully lush prehistoric habitat. Dating as far back as 10.000BCE, various waves of Native American peoples thrived in in this area.  They left behind petroglyphs upon the face of this cliff, and on some of the more prominent rocks below.  Researchers place the oldest of these markings as being approximately 12.000 years old, with newer ones being 5000 and 1500 years old.  Various rock alignments and paths have also been identified on the plateau, just above the main painted side of the cliff. 

  Having gone to this location before with wet plate gear, I wanted to pay homage to it in daguerreotype form.  Making those in the filed though is a task riddled with possible pitfalls, so this was to be a good test of my field readiness.  I decided to camp there for two nights, because there’s nothing quite like being in the desert on those clear winter nights.  I would set up on first day, work all second day, and have some time to shoot a plate or two in the morning of third day before heading back. 

  Of course, camping in the desert means that within an hour or two after arrival every item you brought with you is covered with an even layer of.  I knew that having some dust spots was going to be inevitable, and so made peace with them even while driving in, half an hour down a dirt road with some pretty hairy washes to traverse. I set up in such a way as to have most shade possible for my dark box and working table, but had to move the car and reconfigure once a day, because as soon as even some sun would reach the box, it would heat up to past 100°F.   Midday in the shade it was still 90° though, so fuming times and ratios had to be adjusted with every plate.  I also decided to switch my modus operandi, and this time limited my arsenal to only 19th century lenses.  With me I brought a 75mm Morrison WA, 100mm Dallmeyer 1aa, RR, 210mm C.C. Harrison Petzval, and 12in Waterbury single achromat.  Selecting perspective for my images meant climbing with a 4x5 and tripod on a 45° slope riddled with boulders as big as a room, with plenty of cactus in between each rock and of course the always-possible rattlesnakes.  Overall it was great fun, seeing how I consider moments of high concentration and intense work to be great fun if that work is in fact creative. 

  I fixed and gilded the plates after getting back home.  Thankfully I was reminded that this can indeed be done by a good fellow daguerreotypist, because gilding on location is a sure sign of begging for major trouble.  I selected the following 5 that spoke strongest to me.  Two plates are of same composition; these were made with the Harrison, utilizing different aperture discs in order to have less or more depth of focus.  



Dark box at dusk, petroglyph cliff in distance.

Plate 1, Dallmeyer 1aa

Plate 2, Waterbury Single Achromat

Plate 3, Harrison Petzval f16

Plate 4, Harrison Petzval f5.6

Plate 5, Harrison Petzval f16



  Some ambient info about the trip is as follows.

  While driving there, I was traveling at night east on an empty desert highway, and, while going full speed, saw an animal just about to dart out in front of my wheels.  Our reaction time seemed to have been about the same, because by the time my hands were making a move to the left it too froze in it its tracks, halfway over the white line on pavement. I didn’t move left much, so my headlights hit the figure full blast, and I was elated to realize it was a grey desert fox, which is one animal I have not yet seen in the wild, even by side of the road like this.  For a second there, I got a great look at a beautifully furry creature, and off behind the car it went.  On the first night on location, I had a very small fire going, upon which I made my humble dinner. Shortly after finishing the meal, I was in the state of contemplative meditation, reflecting upon successes and failure of the day, and just staring at the ambers of the fire, as has been my favorite pastime since childhood.  As one sits alone and looks at the fire, there’s a bit of a tunnel vision effect that happens, and the world outside the viewer and the fire pit softly muffles itself and gently drifts off.  There’s not a light or movement around you, and smoke materializes, rises up, and dissipates like civilizations in time. I must have been sitting pretty darn still, because all of a sudden two very bright triangles appeared within the rightmost reach of peripheral vision.  In my dazed dreamy state, I blinked as I moved my head much slower than perhaps the actual situation on the ground of having something unexpectedly come very near me, should have dictated. To the right of me, well within the reach of my right hand, stood an elegant and well groomed desert fox, with it’s medium grey salt and pepper fir, and large triangular ears with bright white fir inside those triangles.  Beautiful creature must have been attracted to the smell of my recent dinner, and was peeking into the fire pit when I first saw it clearly.  At that moment the fox realized I was not an inanimate object, and got seemingly confused or embarrassed, because it looked at me, back at the fire pit, at me again, moved away about a foot, made a move back for a split second, and then slowly trotted away and around the fire like everything was cool and planned.  By then my hand was already going to my phone, and at that moment I was quick enough to get the fire-lit photo below.  I noticed that the fox didn’t exactly run off, but was hanging around and examining camp perimeter area just outside view, so I tossed a few bits of bacon and salami into the dark, and saw them being carefully picked up.  As I tried to shoot another picture of two, complete darkness prevented my phone camera from focusing, but as it glanced over I did end up with that funny second ‘guess who’ photo.  The next night I was thinking my visitor would return, but coyotes were singing loudly nearby, so I think the fox was wise to stay put. 





  Along with enjoying cheerful crackling of the fire, the night desert is also perfect for stargazing.  The Milky Way is clear and colorful, and a myriad world can be seen twinkling down at you.  As I started that part of my meditation, I soon saw a really bright shooting star, thinking it was a great omen.  Then another one, then two more almost at the same time.  Well, turns out the nights I picked for my trip were the best nights to observe the yearly Leonids meteor shower, so I was staying up as late as I could, and saw over a dozen excellent meteors each night, with one fireball, that’s when they break as they heat up, and make multiple fiery trails.
  Upon arriving back to civilization, I saw that the main day of my making plates out there, November 18th, happens to be the birthday of J.L.M. Daguerre, inventor of the noble photographic method I was employing. 


 I am also very grateful to be able to say that 4 of the 5 plates above have been purchased by one collector, and are currently awaiting shipment to their new home.  I am keeping one of the two near-duplicate plates as a reminder of this short but fruitful trip.  Without such sales I would not be able to continue to survive and keep making more work, so, once again, Thank You to All who support independent artists like yours truly.

Anton