animal photo photographer cold evolution nature destruction life
✖ Via MSNBC / 10 Years of the Week in Pictures: “2005: Chilled primates” photo by Niall Carson / AP

“A group of crested macaques, more accustomed to tropical rainforests in Indonesia, huddle together for warmth in Dublin Zoo in Dublin, Ireland, on Dec. 30. The primates are endangered in their own land because of hunting and the clearing of their native habitat.”



• Feb 12, 2010 link notes tagged: animal  photo  photographer  cold  evolution  nature  destruction  life 
art painting painter winter snow cold alone lost
✖ Via Dan McCarthy: “Snow Days” 12” x 12” acrylic on board

Previously on Skandalon



• Dec 28, 2009 link notes  [via] tagged: art  painting  painter  winter  snow  cold  alone  lost 
art technology photo photographer bw vintage snow winter cold nature science
✖ Via Hammer Gallery: Snow Crystal by Wilson Bentley, photomicrograph, c. 1883-1931, 2 7/8 x 3 1/2 inches, H 07

“Wilson Alwyn “Snowflake” Bentley (February 9, 1865 – December 23, 1931), born in Jericho, Vermont, is the first known photographer of snowflakes. He perfected a process of catching flakes on black velvet in such a way that their images could be captured before they either melted or sublimated.” (Wikipedia)

“Though produced in considerably primitive conditions, the photographs are masterpieces of the intricate, infinite patterns in nature, never before imaginable. Wilson A. Bentley captured the astonishing beauty of what he called “gems, wrought by blizzards.” Today, the knowledge we have, in large part, about the complexity and the beauty of the snowflake is due to the scholarly efforts of this remarkable pioneer. Bentley’s prodigious body of work, SNOW CRYSTALS, was published in 1931 in New York, N.Y., by the McGraw-Hill book publishers. That same year, less than a month after the book’s release, Wilson A. Bentley walked home in a raging snow blizzard to make yet more photos of his beloved form of precipitation, and, contracting pneumonia from that walk, died two weeks later.” (Hammer Gallery)

“Every snowflake has an infinite beauty which is enhanced by knowledge that the investigator will, in all probability, never find another exactly like it. Consequently, photographing these transient forms of Nature gives to the worker something of the spirit of a discoverer. Besides combining her greatest skill and artistry in the production of snowflakes, Nature generously fashions the most beautiful specimens on a very thin plane so that they are specially adapted for photomicrographical study.” Read the full essay by Wilson Bentley at his official website.



• Dec 25, 2009 link notes  [via] tagged: art  technology  photo  photographer  BW  vintage  snow  winter  cold  nature  science 

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