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Carved by Time: Landscapes of the Southwest
 
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Carved by Time: Landscapes of the Southwest [Hardcover]

Jake Rajs , Hampton Sides

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: The Monacelli Press (May 18 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1580932185
  • ISBN-13: 978-1580932189
  • Product Dimensions: 31.5 x 2.8 x 24.9 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 2 Kg
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #1,525,998 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Product Description

“There's no place like the Desert Southwest. It's a land of parched canyons, bleached solitudes, and bulwarks of intoxicating rock. A land of sky islands, cinder cones, and mesas the size of battleships, crisscrossed by two great river drainages, the Colorado and the Rio Grande. It's the country made famous by Edward Abbey, Wallace Stegner, and Georgia O'Keeffe, a queer world of upheaval and stark finality cooked in an unforgiving forge. The scale of it dwarfs human beings, not only spatially but also chronologically, suggesting chasms of time that mock our relevance in the story of creation.”
—Hampton Sides

These dramatic rock formations, carved by the wind and shaped by water, and the vivid colors of the landscape are the subject of Jake Rajs's portrait of the Southwest—encompassing the natural beauty of Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, and Utah. Featured are well-known and heavily visited national parks including Mesa Verde and Black Canyon in Colorado, Zion and Arches in Utah, the Vermilion Cliffs in Arizona, and Fort Union National Monument in New Mexico.

Rajs has studied the indigenous culture and architecture of this rich area, focusing on the ancient traditions and buildings of the Navajo, Hopi, and Anasazi and how they are integrated with the landscape. His portfolio of photographs of Bonito Pueblo in Chaco Canyon and of Canyon de Chelly capture the essence of antiquity that pervades these revered archeological sites.

About the Author

Jake Rajs has traveled across America and throughout the world to capture the image and spirit of place. His work is widely published, and his books include the highly successful Beyond the Dunes: A Portrait of the Hamptons, These United States, The Hudson River, and New York City of Islands.

Hampton Sides
is editor-at-large for Outside magazine and the author of the international best-seller, Ghost Soldiers, as well as Americana, Stomping Grounds, and most recently, Hellhound on His Trail. He lives in New Mexico with his wife, Anne, and their three sons.

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Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Carved By Time, Jun 27 2010
By Betty A. Armacost - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Carved by Time: Landscapes of the Southwest (Hardcover)
A gorgeous collection of some of the most beautiful places in the Southwest. Highly recommend this "armchair" glimpse into an area of astounding beauty.

4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Red, Aug 4 2010
By Conrad J. Obregon - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Carved by Time: Landscapes of the Southwest (Hardcover)
From William Henry Jackson to Robert Adams, the American West has been a source of inspiration to photographers. Now, in "Carved by Time: Landscapes of the Southwest", Jake Rajs, a photographer who has established his credentials by wonderful photographs of the northeastern part of the United States, turns his attention in the same direction.

The book concentrates on the landscapes of the Four Corners states of Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico and Utah. The scenes photographed include places that every photographer who has wandered west of the Mississippi River knows: the Grand Canyon, Mesa Verde, Monument Valley, Canyon de Chelly and others. The landscapes are red, but Rajs doesn't forget to include what for me has become a trademark, magnificent skies. What most impressed me were the two page panoramic spreads that really helped to convey the ideas of the marriage of land and sky, although at the same time a panorama of birches seemed the next logical step beyond the birches of Ansel Adams and Eliot Porter. The pictures are devoid of humans, but the markings of man upon the landscape, in the form of photographs of the ruins of the Anasazi dwellings at Mesa Verde, Pueblo Bonito, Cocomino and other sites, and of ancient petroglyphs, are plentiful. I particularly liked the images that looked through an arcade of windows and doors, repeating patterns in this landscape of so much variation. The photographer also often provides us with several adjoining pictures of the same scene, varying either in scale or viewpoint, as if a single image could never be enough to tell us the story. Equally impressive were the snow-swathed landscapes where the white mitigated the endless red.

For me the book called out for comparisons, both to the photographer's other work and to the work of other photographers. (I consider this call to comparison to be one of the features of art that works.) In his work on the North Fork of Long Island, Rajs created images of a more intimate nature, although many of those pictures took the wide view, and seemed to reflect his love of the place. Here one senses a certain feeling of awe and respect, and even though there is the occasional picture of foreground object set against background, it seemed to me almost as if the scope of the landscape forced Rajs to try to encompass it.

I also could not avoid comparing these photographs to those by others who work in the same geographical areas. Foremost in my mind was the work of Jack Dykinga who somehow has managed to tame this same landscape to a comprehensible size and to overcome the constant redness of things. I don't mean to fault Rajs by this comment. Rather it is a statement of the meaning and vision that I found in his photographs, and meaning and vision is, after all, what moves photographs from snapshots to art.
 Go to Amazon.com to see both reviews  5.0 out of 5 stars 

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