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Melting Away

A Ten-Year Journey through Our Endangered Polar Regions

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
For ten years Camille Seaman has documented the rapidly changing landscapes of Earth's polar regions. As an expedition photographer aboard small ships in the Arctic and Antarctic, she has chronicled the accelerating effects of global warming on the jagged face of nearly fifty thousand icebergs. Seaman's unique perspective of the landscape is entwined with her Native American upbringing: she sees no two icebergs as alike; each responds to its environment uniquely, almost as if they were living beings. Through Seaman's lens, each towering chunk of ice—breathtakingly beautiful in layers of smoky gray and turquoise blue—takes on a distinct personality, giving her work the feel of majestic portraiture. Melting Away collects seventy-five of Seaman's most captivating photographs, lifeaffirming images that reveal not only what we have already lost, but more importantly what we still have that is worth fighting to save.
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    • Library Journal

      Starred review from April 15, 2015

      This book documents several visits Seaman made as expedition photographer and sojourner to Antarctica, the Canadian Arctic, Greenland, and Norway's Svalbard between 2003 and 2011. (She stopped going because she couldn't bear to see the devastation wrought by rising temperatures.) The book is astounding proof of the critical role the pictorial arts have in awaking people to the consequences of climate change. Icebergs--hulking, sculptural, wrinkled, crystalline--and the play of polar light on (and within) their surfaces are the author's favorite subjects. Seaman captures magnificent skies, too, and familiar polar fauna, all using few filters and little Photoshopping. In six brief essays, the author discusses her Shinnecock Native American upbringing and its influence on her art, the serendipitous origins of this project and its challenges, and her philosophy. The reproductions are superb, rendering palpable the textures, atmosphere, and colors of far-off places most of us will never see in person. VERDICT In her inimitable way, Seaman writes that she was "recording the voice of these places with my cameras." That voice is quiet and deeply affecting--a relief from the shouted rhetoric that so often accompanies conversation on climate change. A sterling addition to all photography collections.--Robert Eagan, Windsor P.L., Ont.

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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