
Self portrait, 11:45pm PST

The photographs in this series were on display at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, CA from December 7-11, 2008.
Urban outdoor lighting produces enough spectral pollution to turn the city’s night sky into an orange-grey dome, smudging out all but the brightest stars. Of the myriad organisms affected by humanity’s colonization of the darkness by way of electromagnetic radiation, plants are of particular interest. Plant life cycles revolve according to their light environment: Photoreceptors tell them when to extend stems or broaden leaves; when to germinate and when to die.
These images are an examination of photosynthetic organisms as painted with the palette of artificial night lighting. The viewer’s attention is drawn away from the horizon — where the natural light has disappeared — to emphasize the industrial lighting on the organic textures. Tree limbs are framed against the night sky, nebulous clouds of leaves reflecting the glare of sodium vapor security lamps; groundcover is shot from directly above, micro-landscapes rendered in the orange halide tones of residential streetlights.
All of these images were made after civil twilight — when the sun is six degrees below the horizon — using available light with exposures from 20 to 696 seconds.




An 88-acre tract of old growth forest south of Paoli, Indiana. This is the largest remaining old growth woodland in Indiana.




Images from several older posts about Trona, Mt. Islip and the Cleveland National Forest disappeared awhile back. I’m in the process now of revising and re-uploading. First up, “Diamonds in the Rough,” a story I wrote for the LA Weekly back in 2004. Read it here.



More:
• Old Growth: Indiana Pioneer Mothers Memorial Forest – December 28, 2008
• Kelso Dunes, Mojave National Preserve (Part 1 of 3)
• Alaka’i Swamp, Kaua’i – July 27, 2008
• Light Pollution Series One: Artificial Night Lighting and Photosynthetic Organisms
• Garfield Park Conservatory, Chicago – December 21, 2008

My photographs from “Honest Work: Life on a Humboldt Cannabis Farm During Harvest Season” by Dave Reeves, are now available online in the December 2008 issue of Arthur Magazine. Read it online here. Download the complete issue as a PDF here.




More Into The Green:
• Kelso Dunes, Mojave National Preserve (Part 1 of 3)
• Alaka’i Swamp, Kaua’i – July 27, 2008
• Old Growth: Indiana Pioneer Mothers Memorial Forest – December 28, 2008
• Old Growth: Roan Mountain & Mt. Mitchell – September 14 & 16, 2008
• Light Pollution Series One: Artificial Night Lighting and Photosynthetic Organisms
• Garfield Park Conservatory, Chicago – December 21, 2008
• Rancho Mesa, Mojave Desert – October 12, 2008
• Tempe, AZ – November 15-17, 2008
• Glendale Narrows, Los Angeles River – October 14, 2008
• Glendale Narrows, Los Angeles River – October 3, 2008
• Red Hill & Salton City, Salton Sea – October 6-7, 2008
• Atwater Village, Los Angeles – September 23, 24 & 29, 2008