Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Monument Valley







                                                              Here is no water but only rock
                                                 Rock and no water and the sandy road . . .

                                                                        -- T. S. Eliot, The Waste Land


                                                      So this is where God put the West.

                                                                            -- John Wayne 


Located on Navajo tribal land straddling the border between Arizona and Utah, Monument Valley has become the archetypal visual representation of the American West, thanks in large measure to the Western movies directed by John Ford.

Beginning with Stagecoach in 1939, Ford used Monument Valley in nine of his movies.  You can see a trailer for Stagecoach by clicking here; a trailer for what is arguably Ford's best film, The Searchers (1956), by clicking here.

Since then, Monument Valley has been featured in dozens of movies (including 2001: A Space Odyssey, Thelma and Louise, Forrest Gump, Back to the Future III, and this summer's The Lone Ranger); TV shows; video games; music videos and album covers; and in millions of print images.


The rock walls and monoliths of Monument Valley rise hundreds of feet above the dusty desert.







They stand like crumbling battlements of giant fortresses . . . lonely sentinels awaiting an enemy that never came, breached only by the relentless assault of time and weather.







Approaching Monument Valley from the south, for miles you see nothing but empty desert and scrub.






Then stark eruptions of rock begin to appear:

















 





















Finally, you come over a hill and there in the distance is the familiar skyline:





Monument Valley lies within Navajo tribal lands, and is operated by the Navajos much like a national park.  


Outside the park, there are the obligatory souvenir shops and such, scaled appropriately to the geography and the volume of traffic . . .












Inside the park, there's a hotel and visitor center . . .




And lots of tourists, on their own . . .


















        (hope those guys had a car for their bikes . . . )





Or being driven by commercial tour companies in pickups retrofitted with jitney seats . . . 





 (It gets a little crowded on the road sometimes!)


And at every "scenic overlook" stop, there are Navajos selling jewelry from tables or the back of a pickup:





 






But of course it's not the jewelry or souvenirs that we come for . . .  it's the land and its desolate beauty:














 . . . capturing it with our cameras and our imaginations . . .







from dawn . . .








to dusk . . .





If you'd like to see these images -- and more -- in larger versions, go to my website, Todos Juntos Photography, by clicking here.

Enjoy!





Thursday, May 23, 2013

Spectacular Clouds and Light Show




Although New Mexico is known for its beautiful sunsets (and sunrises!), occasionally the action at sunset is not in the west, but in the east, when the sun shines on a cloud formation.  Earlier this week was one of those occasions.

It started pretty dramatically as the sun began to shine on a massive system to the east and south above the Sandia Mountains -- and visible from our back yard.





The northeast portion (on the left in the photo above) was the most interesting at first, but then, as the sun fell, the southeast part (on the right) just sort of exploded with light:










Just a few minutes later, the sun fell below the horizon, and the show began to fade:







The time elapsed from the first photo to the last one was 16 minutes:  7:58p to 8:14p.

If you would like to see larger versions of these (and a few more), visit my photography website, Todos Juntos Photography, by clicking here.

Enjoy!

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Chrome and Color: Classic Cars in Rio Rancho







Every large city has its classic car aficionados, and the Albuquerque area is no exception.  Yesterday about 300 of them (and their cars) gathered at a public park in Rio Rancho (a suburb of ABQ) on a beautiful, cloudless New Mexico day, and my photo buddy, Barry Schwartz, and I couldn't resist the photo op.  (Yeah, I know, it's sort of a guy thing.)


There were Mustangs and Stingrays and GTOs . . .




















Caddies and Volkswagens . . .












                                                                       and a red, red Rolls . . .
























along with everything in between . . . 




                . . . even a DeLorean (sans Flux Capacitor) . . .




Because the cars were parked so closely together, and because there were so many people walking around them, it was difficult to get a clean shot of an entire car.  So for the most part we went for tight shots of detail.  And, oh, what cool detail there was . . .












 


 



















 And of course we had to work for those interesting angles . . .






















At some point I realized that many of these cars, which I longed for when I was a teenager, are now 50 years old and, by definition, antiques.  But we're all still going strong!




For more (and larger) images, you can visit my photography website, Todos Juntos Photography, by clicking here.

Enjoy!