Immediately upon leaving one of my old jobs as a newspaper reporter and photographer (I worked for a couple of small daily papers where it's common to do both tasks), I drove east over Sonora Pass to visit Mono Lake. Although I'd always loved the photography side of my job, there was a special feeling I got while shooting among the tufa formations and gulls, along the wide-open lakeshore buzzing with alkali flies, surrounded by desert scrub and volcanic cinder cones, and nary a human soul in sight. I guess I'd describe the feeling as a sense of coming home. I felt I was exactly where I ought to be, doing exactly what I ought to be doing.
Being outside stalking nature with a camera was -- and remains -- one of the greatest sources of well-being I know. Ironically, I was on my way to spend the summer living with a friend and his fiance in New York City's East Village, and all these years later I still make my living in the city and find re-creation out beyond it.
Every now and then, though, I like to poke around the city in the company of a friend who actually prefers to photograph in the urban jungle. Although I live in the city, I'm still kind of a fish out of water when it comes to finding inspiration in the urban scene. Part of the reason I keep at it is the sense I have that looking for inspiration here will actually help my nature photography. Keeping in touch with inspiration is like tapping into the Fountain of Youth. It's the only way to keep from getting stale or bogged down in cliches. I guess my hope is that by challenging myself to find inspiration in the city once in a while, I'll have a deeper experience of nature's landscapes too.
In the diptych below you see a trace of our innate human desire for the wide open spaces even within the city. On the left is the Ferry Building during the weekend farmer's market where the sense of space comes from a high ceiling naturally lit with skylights. On the right is the atrium in the Hyatt Regency Hotel where one person has found her own distinctly civilized patch of open space in the heart of San Francisco.
















