Florian Schulz Publishes Arctic Photo Book
Award-winning nature photographer Florian Schulz has published a new panoramic photo essay title, "To the Arctic". Schulz's large-format book contains more than 150 color images that take readers on a personal journey to the remote-yet-vibrant Arctic. The book also includes several first-person accounts that describe Schulz's larger-than-life adventures in the far north...
Florian Schulz Photos Selected for "Visions of the Arctic" Campaign
German photographer Florian Schulz's work has been featured as part of a visual campaign that celebrates the beauty of the Arctic while simultaneously warning of the threats of offshore oil development and industrialization. The campaign, titled "Visions of the Arctic," was launched in April and is comprised of a series of public presentations by Schulz. A traveling exhibit of the photos opened at the G2 Gallery in Los Angeles on May 7.
Schulz Photographs Yellowstone, Yukon
Mountaineers Books has published “Yellowstone to Yukon: Freedom to Roam,” with more than 200 full-color images by Florian Schulz (see Portfolio, page 12) and a foreword by Robert Kennedy Jr. Schulz documents the landscape, plants, animals and people of an ecosystem that exists along the spine of the Rocky Mountains. Although the wildness is still untouched by man, it lies in the path of encroaching development.
Contributing essayists Karsten Heuer, David Suzuki, Rick Bass and David Quammen describe...
Florian Schulz: Don’t Fence Me In
Florian Shulz's journey to save North America's wilderness.
More than anything else, wildlife needs room — room to roam, to forage, to follow the flow of the seasons. The same can be said of Florian Schulz, a German-born nature photographer who has spent nearly half his life wandering the wilderness of North America, trying to preserve the fragile paradise around him, one photo at a time.
His cause can be summed up neatly in three characters, Y2Y, an acronym that stands for Yellowstone to Yukon, the vast, 2,000-mile long "ecoregion" stretching from the Alaska/Canada border, down the Rocky Mountains to Wyoming. Inside this region are some of the last remaining areas of pristine wilderness on the continent, mostly isolated in little islands of biodiversity amid growing suburban sprawl...