NANPA Honors Photographers Promoting Nature Photography
Earlier this year, at its 12th Annual Summit, the North American Nature Photography Association recognized a number of photographers whose work has helped to promote the field of nature photography. Patricio Robles Gil, whose books illuminate the beauty and fragility of Mexico's ecosystems, was named the 2006 Outstanding Photographer of the Year. Lifetime Achievement Awards were presented to environmental and fine-art photographer Pat O'Hara and Les Line, former editor-in-chief at Audubon for 25 years.
Three industry veterans were named NANPA Fellows, a designation bestowed on those who have contributed at least 20 years to...
Patricio Robles Gil Named 2006 NANPA Outstanding Photographer of the Year; Pat O'Hara and Les Line also Honored
Patricio Robles Gil has been named 2006 Outstanding Photographer of the Year by the North American Nature Photography Association. Gil is known for his passion for conservation and the use of photography in protection efforts in his home country of Mexico. The award will be presented at NANPA's 12th Annual Summit, to be held Feb. 9-12, 2006, in Denver.
Other honors being presented at the summit include...
NANPA Members Amongst Winners in Nature's Best Photo Competition
Among the 142 winners of the annual Nature’s Best International Photography Awards were many members of the North American Nature Photography Association. NANPA photographers from the western United States who were recognized include:
Robert Barber, Colorado, Highly Honored, Creative Digital;
Alice Cahill, California, Winner, Plant Life; ...
NANPA Announces 2005 Award Winners; Tui de Roy Named Outstanding Photographer of the Year
The North American Nature Photography Association has announced its award recipients for 2005. Tui de Roy has been named the 2005 Outstanding Photographer of the Year, the association's highest accolade.
A Belgian native who moved to the Galapagos Islands at the age of two, Roy first showcased her work in Audubon magazine, and since has appeared in nature magazines in 25 countries. She also has published two books about...
Erwin Bauer, 1919-2004; and Peggy Bauer, 1932-2004
The nature photography community lost two of its most prominent role models earlier this year. In February, venerable nature photographer Erwin Bauer died of bone marrow cancer at his home in Sequim, Wash. Erwin's death was followed a month later by that of his wife and artistic partner, Peggy, who was killed in a car accident on March 23.
Following his graduation from the University of Cincinnati, Erwin served in World War II, for which he was awarded the...
Robert Glenn Ketchum Keynotes Bald Eagle Festival in Alaska
Last November, Robert Glenn Ketchum was the keynote speaker at the American Bald Eagle Foundation's Alaska Chilkat Bald Eagle Festival 2003, held in Haines, Alaska. In addition, Ketchum was a speaker at the North American Nature Photography Association's 10th Anniversary Summit in Portland, Ore., in January.
Natalie Fobes Receives 2003 NANPA Fellow Award
Natalie Fobes has received the 2003 Fellow Award given by the North American Nature Photography Association. The Pulitzer Prize finalist and co-founder of Blue Earth Alliance is known for her work documenting how humans use and, in some cases, abuse the environment.
Blue Earth Alliance recently honored Fobes as the first recipient of its new Natalie Award, which was inspired by her...
No Nature Photographer is an Island Anymore
Like so many things in life, photography runs in cycles based on reaction and a desire for change, even if that means reinventing the wheel at times. Sometimes these changes lack the proper historical perspective of all that has gone before. Other times, the changes sought harken back to seemingly safer, more predictable times.
In the post-Civil War years, American photographers began turning their attention from the war to the West. They brought home images of the incredible, endless landscapes of the new frontier to an East hungry for expansion. They built an enthusiasm for these places that would help lead to the founding of the national park system, starting with Yellowstone National Park in 1872.
Today, more than a century later, nature photographers are still bringing home images...
For Love of the Game
The sun is fading over the Rocky Mountains on a late winter Friday afternoon in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Tom Mangelsen, a powerful man in his mid-50s, is tucked away in his downtown studio, surrounded by 2,500 boxes of film he has shot and developed in the past few years but not yet had time to review. With his whirlwind schedule this spring and summer, he's unlikely to catch up anytime soon.
By the end of June, he'll have released a new catalog, published a new book and opened his thirteenth Images of Nature photo gallery, this time in Kirkland, Wash. He'll miss the late April opening gala, however. That week he'll be spending his evenings huddling in a bamboo thicket...
Erwin and Peggy Bauer Receive NANPA Lifetime Achievement Award; Tom Mangelsen Named Photographer of the Year
The North American Nature Photography Association (NANPA) has announced the winners of its prestigious awards for 2000. The Lifetime Achievement Award goes to Erwin and Peggy Bauer of Sequim, Washington, while Thomas Mangelsen of Jackson Hole, Wyoming has been named Outstanding Nature Photographer of the Year.
The awards will be presented at the Annual Summit in Austin, Texas, January 12-16, 2000.