- Philip Hyde (photographer)
Philip Hyde (1921-2006) was a pioneer landscape
photographer andconservationist . He attendedAnsel Adams ' photography program at the California School of Fine Arts in the fall of 1947, studying under photographers likeMinor White ,Imogen Cunningham andDorothea Lange .Hyde became a contributing photographer for the
Sierra Club Annual in 1951. By 1955, when he photographed for "This is Dinosaur," a book highlighting a proposed dam on theGreen River inDinosaur National Monument inUtah andColorado , he had become the primary conservation photographer for the Club.David Brower commissioned him to photograph for what came to be known as "battle books,"--with which the Sierra Club waged various environmental campaigns.In the 1960s, the US
Bureau of Reclamation was considering damming theColorado River inGrand Canyon . The Sierra Club published a book called "Time and the River Flowing: Grand Canyon" in 1964 in an effort to turn public opinion against this project that threatened the integrity of the wild river and its canyon. Philip Hyde was the photographer they chose. This book reshaped the image of the Grand Canyon for Americans and played a major role in preserving the Canyon.Hyde said, "For every place there will always be people that want to exploit it, and there will always be people—hopefully—that want to save it and keep it as it is." Even with the risk of inviting the crowds into paradise, better to publish your photographs and rally the troops. What’s in the frame of the photograph matters artistically, to be sure, but what’s outside the frame can destroy it.
Hyde realized that spending time in the desert turned him from a black-and-white photographer to a color photographer. He is well-known for collaborating with author
Edward Abbey on a desert classic, "Slickrock," (1971) yet another Sierra Club book published to highlight the threats to wilderness, in this case, the Utah redrock country ofCanyonlands National Park ,Capitol Reef National Park , and theEscalante River wilderness.Books Published
Hyde produced 15 books, most of them for the Sierra Club, and contributed to 70 others. His last book, "The Range of Light," published in 1992, included passages by
John Muir , the naturalist and founder of the Sierra Club. His last interview was featured in "Lasting Light: 125 Years of Grand Canyon Photography" by Stephen TrimbleHis books include:
* 1992: "The Range of Light" - ISBN 0-87905-480-8
* 1990: "Drylands: The Deserts of North America" - ISBN 0-517-03289-9
* 1979: "A Glen Canyon portfolio" - ISBN 0-87358-187-3
* 1971: "Slickrock: The Canyon Country of Southeast Utah" - ISBN 0-87156-051-8
* 1967: "Navajo Wildlands: As Long as the Rivers Shall Run" - Photographs by Philip Hyde; Text by Stephen C. Jett, with selections from Willa Cather and others. Edited by Kenneth Brower with a foreword by David Brower.
* 1963: "The Last Redwoods" - Philip Hyde and François Leydet; Foreword by Stewart L. Udall.References
[http://www.sierraclub.org/library/lists_exhibit.asp Sierra Club Exhibit Format Series]
* 2006: "Lasting Light: 125 Years of Grand Canyon Photography" - Stephen Trimble - ISBN 0-87358-894-0External links
* [http://www.sierraclub.org/ca/hetchhetchy/hyde_photo_index.html Philip Hyde Photographs of Hetch Hetchy Reservoir, 1955]
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