Synopsis
Robert Glenn Ketchum - widely renowned for his breathtaking color photographs of the natural world - here presents us with views of the little-known Arctic landscape, images made during the course of an extraordinary adventure in 1994: the traverse of the Northwest Passage.
Ketchum's voyage on the 175-foot craft Itasca moves through some of the most extreme climatic conditions and astonishing vistas on the planet. During the trip, the photographer had virtually unlimited access to an on-board helicopter, an opportunity seldom before afforded to any Arctic researcher. He made daily use of this resource to investigate the terrain and make photographs.
Included in Northwest Passage are excerpts from Ketchum's daily log, which chronicles some of the challenges and wonders encountered by the Itasca over the course of the voyage - mazes of pack ice, a sudden, fierce cold front, small Inuit towns, vast schools of beluga whales....Ketchum's descriptions, together with his awe-inspiring photographs, bring to life a world many of us have never imagined.
Northwest Passage also includes an informative preface by William Simon (former United States Secretary of the Treasury, and this expedition's leader), outlining the history of the elusive Northwest Passage. Poetic excerpts from the writings of Barry Lopez, award-winning author of Arctic Dreams and Of Wolves and Men, give added resonance to Northwest Passage's depiction of the amazing Arctic.
Synopsis
A photographer's account of his 23-day journey through the Northwest Passage from Alaska, through Canada and the Northwest Territories, to Greenland. Displayed in an oversize, wide format (12.5x10.5<">), spine-tingling full-page color photos taken fron the boat and from a helicopter show the breathtaking vastness of the landscape. Excerpts from Bar
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