Gary Saretzky Photo Books
Brown, Dean. Photographs of the American Wilderness by Dean Brown.
Brown, Dean. Photographs of the American Wilderness by Dean Brown.
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Introduction by Carol Brown. AMPHOTO, 1976. Hardcover, fine in black cloth with protected very good price-clipped dust jacket that has a few spots of wear at extremities. Born in Virginia in 1936, Dean Brown was also a professional musician. He became a full-time free lance photographer in 1967 and for six years traveled with his wife Carol to the Southwest, Alaska, New York, New Hampshire, Texas, and California. His work appeared in numerous publications. While on assignment for Time-Life in 1973, he fell while climbing a cliff in bad weather in order to get a better shot of a waterfall at Table Mountain in the White Mountains, New Hampshire, and soon died from his injuries. This book includes 48 of his color landscape photographs, including his last of Table Mountain. Summary:
Photographs of the American Wilderness (1976) is a posthumous tribute to the work of Dean Brown (1936–1973), a photographer who, in his short career, became a master of the dye-transfer process and a poet of the natural world. Published by Amphoto, the book serves as both a portfolio of his finest landscapes and a memorial to his artistic philosophy.
Core Content and Vision
The book documents Brown's extensive travels through the most remote regions of the United States, including the High Sierras, the desert Southwest, and the Alaskan wilderness.
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The "Intimate" Landscape: Unlike the monumental, grand-scale vistas of Ansel Adams, Brown’s work often focused on the subtle, quiet details of the wilderness—the patterns of ice, the color of a single pool of water, or the soft light filtering through a forest.
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The Dye-Transfer Mastery: The volume is celebrated for its exceptional color fidelity. Brown utilized the complex dye-transfer process, which allowed him an unprecedented level of control over color saturation and contrast, resulting in images that feel both hyper-realistic and dreamlike.
Artistic Style
Dean Brown’s approach was defined by a deep, almost spiritual reverence for the land.
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Subtle Palette: He avoided the garish, over-saturated "postcard" colors often seen in commercial nature photography, opting instead for a palette of earthy tones, misty greys, and luminous pastels.
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Compositional Elegance: His images are characterized by a formal balance and a sense of stillness. He often photographed in low light or "flat" weather conditions (fog, rain, or twilight) to emphasize form and mood over dramatic shadows.
Key Information
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Published: 1976 by Amphoto (American Photographic Book Publishing Co.).
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Introduction: Features an introduction by his wife, Carol Brown, who provided the biographical context for his work following his tragic death in a fall while on a photographic expedition in New Hampshire.
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Format: Includes 40 high-quality color plates that remain some of the finest examples of 1970s wilderness photography.
Summary: Photographs of the American Wilderness is a quiet, profound celebration of the natural world. It stands as a landmark in color landscape photography, proving that the wilderness could be captured with the same intellectual and formal rigor previously reserved for black-and-white masters.
