| CRATER LAKE - Every year, a half-million people drive
up to the rim overlooking Crater Lake, and most of them snap a couple
photos of the startlingly blue waters before turning around and
heading on their way.
Working with a Leica camera, a single 35mm lens, and black and
white film, photographer Pete Myers has been skiing around the rim
of the collapsed volcano as winter begins to embrace it, roping
up to a tree and leaning over the edge of the caldera that forms
the nation's deepest and clearest lake.
As one of a series of artists in residence at Crater Lake National
Park, Myers is trying to capture the size and geometry of this place
that lives in so many family photo albums with an image worthy of
the centennial of Oregon's only national park.
"How do you come to a place like this and not create a photographic
cliche? said Myers. "For me it's the geometry of the caldera and
the story of the snow.
"I wanted to catch the park at the onset of winter, just when the
first snowfalls were coming in," creating the powdered sugar effect,
he said. "When the rocks are still showing through in the caldera,
and the powdered sugar is highlighting the geometry of it, that's
the magic moment."
Myers' work and the work of two dozen other artists, each spending
a couple weeks living and working at the park through the end of
2001, will be displayed at Southern Oregon University's Schneider
Museum of Art as part of the celebration marking the May 22, 2002
park centennial.
The idea came from Glen Kaye, a retired National Park Service naturalist
who began his career at Crater Lake. He started similar programs
at Rocky Mountain National Park and Hawaii Volcanoes National Park.
"One of my frustrations at Hawaii Volcanoes was seeing busload
after busload of people coming by making rolling stops through the
parking lots and overlooks and taking pictures of experiences they
never had," said Kaye. "We want people to have deeper and richer
experiences, both intellectually and emotionally.
"It is basically continuing a tradition of looking for ways to
communicate the values of the park, which are not all intellectual,"
said Kaye. "Some of them are emotional, so we are trying to reach
the right side of the brain.
"We are not just looking for the traditional realist, the representational
artist," said Kaye. "We are more interested in people who have original
things to say."
There are traditional artists working in oils, watercolors and
pastels, but there are also a digital artist, a sculptor, a textile
artist and Catie Levitt of Ashland, whose paintings are infused
with the legends of King Arthur.
"One of the myths around the creation of Crater Lake was that the
god of the sky and the god of the earth were having a battle that
caused Mount Mazama to blow up," said Levitt. "That and the Arthurian
legends were kind of a take-off place for me to interpret the landscape."
She is working on one painting titled "Forgiveness" that depicts
male and female wizards. The landscape includes an imaginary ice
castle and The Phantom Ship, the very real tip of a volcanic dike
that pokes out of the water of Crater Lake.
"To me, (Crater Lake) always has been a very enchanted place,"
Levitt said.
Margaret Garrington, a pastel artist from Ashland, found herself
getting to know the hidden wonders of the park that she had never
seen when she brought out-of-town visitors up to the rim to look
over the edge.
"The hardest thing about being up there was that there were so
many worthy subjects for painting," she said. "No matter where you
look, you say to yourself, `That would be a great painting. Oh!
That would be a great painting! OH! THAT would be a great painting!"
Myers' work mixes the traditional 35mm camera with digital technology.
At 16, he was a consultant to NASA, working on the back-up imaging
system for the Pioneer II space probe and a temperature control
for a frog embryo experiment on the Space Shuttle. He left NASA
to develop a three-dimensional audio system, which did not make
him rich.
Now living in Moss Beach, Calif., he turned eight years ago to
photography, using entrepreneurship as a vision. He haunted the
abandoned mining towns and desert geography of the arid country
east of the Sierra Nevada, looking for beauty and lessons in the
broken dreams from another century.
"What you see in the West's entrepreneurial cycle of gold mining
is very much how it operates in Silicon Valley today," said Myers.
"You had two guys with a shovel and a dream. They poured in all
their money and all of their hope and all of their dream.
"The people who started the wave were not the ones to benefit.
It's the organized companies that came later that reeped the harvest
of the West."
As the remnants of a volcano high in the Cascade Range, Crater
Lake offers a completely different vision and challenge. To prepare
himself, Myers bought plenty of Gortex outdoor gear, read everything
he could find about Crater Lake, studied the work of photographers
who preceded him, and Web-surfed four or five times a day to Crater
Cam, an internet video image of the lake.
Crater Cam prepared him for when the light would be good for his
photographs, but not for the incredible size of his subject.
Formed about 7,700 years ago after the Mount Mazama volcano collapsed
in a massive eruption, the caldera filled with melting snow over
centuries to form a lake six miles wide and nearly 2,000 feet deep,
containing 4.6 trillion gallons of water. From Hillman Peak, the
highest point on the rim at elevation 8,151 feet, the caldera wall
drops nearly 2,000 feet to the surface of the lake.
"It's so vast and so big, there is no scale that you can hold open
in your mind that you can put something that size in," said Myers.
"You cannot find a way of looking at the lake that gives it this
big scale without digging into it somehow.
"The thing I found that worked best was when I was over the edge
shooting down the caldera. There is this physical geometry curling
around the lens and all of a sudden you start to understand how
big it is."
With the Rim Road covered with snow, he skied through unbroken
snow to his photo spots. The furthest trek was eight miles to Sun
Notch, where he had just 45 minutes to work before he had to start
back.
"When you're standing here it's so geometrical - it's just WHUMP,"
he said looking over the edge. "But when you take a picture it flattens
out."
To create depth and clarity, the old masters of photography relied
on large format cameras and the chemical alchemy of the darkroom.
To conserve weight, Myers uses a 35mm camera and just one lens.
For his final image, he scans his negatives into a Macintosh computer
and minutely manipulates the shading and outlines for as much as
100 hours using the program Photoshop. He then prints on a large
format laser printer.
Unlike so many tourists who looked over the edge at Crater Lake
and moved on, Myers found himself wanting to come back for more.
"Now leaving, it just seems like Chapter One," he said of his work
here. "I don't know what Chapter Two is going to be, but it feels
a lot more like Chapter One than I ever would have guessed."
On the Net:
Crater Lake National Park:
www.nps.gov/crla/
Pete Myers: www.petemyers.com
Margaret Garrington: www.studiofox.com |