All images © Nevada Wier
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| Sheiks enjoying belly dancing show, Dubai |
When
asked to define her style, Nevada Wier replies, “I’m not sure it’s a
particular style, it’s more of a niche of photography that sets me
apart.” She has carved this niche for herself in the world of travel
photography by specializing in the remote places around the world and
the cultures that inhabit them. Over the years, she’s traveled
throughout Southeast Asia, India, China, Nepal, Africa, and Mongolia,
among other far-flung destinations. Wier markets her stock images
through Corbis and Getty, and has been published in Outdoor Photographer, National Geographic, National Geographic Adventure, Geo, Islands, Outside, and Smithsonian. Her work has been published in several books, including The Land of Nine Dragons—Vietnam Today, Adventure Travel Photography, and A Day in the Life of Thailand. She currently resides in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Wier,
who originally hails from Washington D.C., says that she didn’t become
interested in photography until her late 20s. “I actually got seduced
by a large-format camera, a beautiful wooden Deardorff.” She attended
Prescott College in Arizona during the ’70s where she majored in an
outdoor program, a contrast to the political environment in which she
was raised. “I wasn’t interested in being a photographer until I got
this camera, and then I imagined myself at the Grand Canyon with a
black cloth draped over my head.” Nonetheless, Wier found that the
reality of toting a large-format camera around with a big wooden tripod
wasn’t practical for backpacking, as she was also a course
director/instructor for Outward Bound, an organization that leads
groups of people on adventure excursions.
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| Porter carrying pots to market, Nepal |
Eventually,
however, she discovered that she was “more interested in what was at
the bottom of the mountain that what was at the top.” While walking
through the exotic villages that she traveled to for Outward Bound, she
became intrigued by the people and cultures that she encountered.
But rather than shooting from a documentary standpoint, she prefers to
look for what’s beautiful in the world. Nonetheless, she’s quick to
point out, “That doesn’t mean that I try to mythologize a situation.
I’m not looking for a postcard type of shot.”
Learning on her Own Wier
professes to being self-taught in photography, and learned her craft by
using her Deardorff camera and processing film in a black-and-white
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| Monks preparing for cham dance, Ladakh |
darkroom.
She notes, “Nowadays there’s so many fabulous workshops, talks and
seminars which weren’t available to me back then.” She also learned by
looking at good photography, and “by studying what I shot and trying to
understand my mistakes. It was helpful because I wasn’t trying to mimic
anybody else, I just wanted to figure out why theirs were working and
mine weren’t.”
“Starting out with black-and-white
film was very important in my photography. It immediately forces you to
see differently,” she comments. “Color is more difficult than
black-and-white, and you almost have to place an overlay of color onto
a black-and-white skeleton to see if it works.” Her brother sent her a
Pentax camera and she shot black-and-white in a 35mm format for several
years. “I didn’t shoot color until my first international trip to
Bolivia,” she says, and then she brought one camera for color film, and
another for black-and-white. “I shot 30 rolls of film in eight
months, which I thought was phenomenal in that amount of time,” she
remembers.
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| Moken sea gypsy diving for mother-of-pearl, Myanmar |
This experience showed Wier that she “saw better in color,” although
she says she misses the “alchemy of the black-and-white darkroom.” She
left black-and-white photography behind, but alludes, “Color is very
seductive, and what defines a really good color photographer is that
they’re not relying solely on color for a good photograph. Sometimes
color is what matters in a picture, but other times it’s the action,
the light, the pattern or the composition. I always tell my students
that you’ve got to have two of those to make the image work.”
In Sync When asked about her photographic influences, she replies, “I think everyone is influenced by the National Geographic photographers. But actually for me it was some of the very early black-and-white photographers, like Imogen
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| Fishermen getting ready to head to sea, Dominican Republic |
Cunningham.
I think their images represented some of the most creative work around,
and I learned very quickly that it wasn’t about the equipment, it’s
about the eye.” She adds, “It’s a left-brain, right-brain pursuit. You
have to be part nerd, and then let it go.” Wier says she also admires
David Allen Harvey —“he’s so good at photographing with high contrast,”
Susan Meiselas, “who was always a hero of mine. Her photographs are so
graphic and compelling,” and Jay Maisel, who does masterful work in
color.
Wier also has a gift for
establishing rapport with the people she photographs. “I shoot with
very wide-angle lenses and try to get close to people,” she explains.
“I’m very interested in interpersonal relationships and what’s involved
in their particular culture.” She stresses the importance of non-verbal
communication, which is very important in different parts of the world.
“I consciously try to synchronize with a person; with their rhythm and
feeling. It’s hard to explain, but it’s a wider conduit to relating to
somebody, especially non-verbally.” This comes from her love of people,
and her belief that individuals within a culture really matter. “Even
as a child, I’ve always believed in the Power of One,” she points out.
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| Evening prayer, Myanmar |
Favorite Equipment As
for camera gear, she reports, “I’m 99.9% digital.” Although it’s tough
to find power sources in some of the remote areas to which she travels,
Wier says that more companies are becoming involved in developing these
solutions. She shoots with a Canon EOS 1DS Mark II, and adds, “I’ve
always been a big fan of the Image Stabilizing (IS) lenses.” She
prefers to use lenses
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| Farmer in cafe, Vietnam |
that
she can hand-carry, ranging from a 15mm fisheye to a telephoto that’s
about 540mm with a 1.4 tele-extender. “My favorite lens is a 16–35mm
f/2.8,” she says. Included in her cache is a 15mm, 28–105mm IS, and a
100–400mm telephoto zoom. “I like extremes; either wide-angle or
extreme compression.” Because she’s not always in optimum lighting
conditions, Wier uses a Canon 580 flash creatively for fill light, to
draw viewers’ attention to a particular place in the photograph, and to
give the illusion of sharpness amid blur. She also utilizes wireless
transmitters when working with flash.
To See a Gallery of Nevada Wier's Images, Click Here
She
doesn’t use a tripod very often—“I’m going to Mongolia in a few weeks,
and there’s such weight restrictions on those small planes that I’m
going to jettison my tripod completely for this trip.” As opposed to
the pre-digital days, notes Wier, there’s a lot of new technology to
learn and post-processing nowadays. She says, “A big part of my job is
in front of the computer afterwards.” She also feels strongly about the
art of RAW processing, and uses Adobe Photoshop for dodging and
burning, but not for excessive image manipulation or cropping.
Continued Creativity Wier
offers a few workshops and lectures during the year, primarily for
Santa Fe Photo Workshops, in addition to the Rocky Mountain School of
Photography and the Sundance Institute. She also leads photo tours for
a select group of students. In terms of editorial work, she’s cutting
back “for a number of reasons—the day rates haven’t kept up with the
expenses that photographers have to put out these days.” However, she’s
excited about some of her new projects, like writing a book on her
travels, and a current project on Myanmar (formerly Burma), shooting
pictures for other long-term projects, and working on images to show in
an exhibit. She’s recently completed a set of three hanging “scrolls”
of underwater shots photographed off the coast of Myanmar, which
consist of several small digital images on long, vertical scrolls.
“I’ve never wanted to have an exhibit of my work until digital printing
came out,” explains Wier. Although there may not be a lot of
money in photo exhibits, she concedes, she’s making it work by creating
more images for Getty and Corbis, the two agencies through which she
markets her stock photography. Wier is also revamping her website so
that people can license some of her images directly.
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| Elderly woman, Ladakh |
When
asked for her advice to up-and coming-pros, Wier emphasizes the
importance of being creative in today’s emerging markets. “You’ve got
to embrace technology and be willing to reinvent yourself. You
must also look at new ways of marketing yourself,” she says, which is a
process that she describes as “exhausting but exhilarating.” As for
entering the world of professional travel photography, she states, “The
travel field has always been tough. You must look beyond newsstand
markets, like National Geographic
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| Camel market at Ashkabhad, Turkmenistan |
and Travel & Leisure.
There’s so much competition in those markets, so you have to be
creative and look for other avenues. You also need to have what I call
‘the tenacity quotient’—you really have to want it.” She adds that
entering the world of professional photography is more about business
than about photography.
Nevada Wier is not one to stand still.
After we spoke, she was about to hop a plane to Mongolia. This winter,
she’s going to photograph several other remote tribal areas. She’s
going to lead a workshop in Bangkok, and in February of 2007, she’s
going to Ladakh, India to shoot the winter festival, “and then it will
be getting warm enough to think about coming home to Santa Fe,” she
laughs.
You can see more of Nevada Wier’s work on http://www.nevadawier.com.
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