Kirk Williams Update

Posted: December 22nd, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: Alumni News | No Comments »

Kirk Williams has moved from his room at Denver’s Craig Hospital, the world’s leading facility dealing with the kind of spinal injury Kirk suffered last November. Moving into a Denver apartment with his brother Clayton, who is helping care for him, his progress has been so good as to impress even the doctors. As always, Kirk’s optimism and enthusiasm defines his rehabilitation — and the rest of his life.

But is a wheelchair life and he is learning to do over simple things, like zipping his jacket up. He and his brother have created an amazing (and well produced) web site, www.aspokenlife.com, a Kirk Williams Chronicle, in which Kirk writes each day about what happened and his progress. He tried out various wheelchairs before settling on one — and looked at how a monopod could be attached so he can continue his photography.

Kirk attended the Adventure Photograph Workshop in Jackson Hole in September. An active outdoor athlete, he was riding his bicycle on a mountain trail when as he moved over to allow an oncoming cyclist the right of way, his bicycle struck a rock and he was thrown to the ground. And in the accident, lay motionless with a serious spinal injury that instantly paralyzed him. Thus began a series of events that leaves Kirk saying how lucky he is. Lucky in that the oncoming cyclist was an orthopedic surgeon who instantly recognized the seriousness of the injury and who cared for him until the medical helicopter arrived. Lucky in that on his arrival at the Denver Health Hospital, two top surgeons were there and began the operation to fuze and replace severely-fractured cervical vertebra. From there it was to the Craig Hospital to begin the rehabilitation where doctors were unable to say how much movement he would ever have in his arms and hands, much less the rest of his body.

But the progress has been amazing and though he may never walk again, much of his movement has come back — enough to talk optimistically of the rest of his life and a changed normalcy. If you want to keep up to date on his progress — and to share in a big dose of optimism, visit his daily blog. www.aspokenlife.com


Workshop Alumni In Briefs

Posted: December 22nd, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: Alumni News | No Comments »

Kort Duce, who has attended the Summit, was photographing the 2011 Yamaha line of snowmobiles for Yamaha in central Wyoming.  The ad agency and Yamaha group along with Duce and another photographer had just finished the shoot when at 4 a.m., the main lodge that was the project headquarters, burned to the ground.  With all Kort’s equipment — and three days work.  With quickly borrowed cameras and computers, the entire group had to start from scratch and do the entire shoot over.  Kort, who was staying in one of the nearby cabins to the lodge, probably takes his equipment to bed with him now . .

John Moore, who continues as one of Getty’s top photographers, travels from his Denver home to wherever Getty needs the prime shooter.  Lately, he was sent to cover the close of the Congress in Washington as the health care bills moved through the senate.  After the first of the year, he returns to Afganistan as that war escalates.

Kevin Moloney is back in Boulder, Co. from a six-week session teaching photojournalism in Burma.  Moloney teaches photojournalism at the University of Colorado and is the New York Times contract photographer for the Mountain West states.

Chen Xiaomei has returned to the states from her homeland China to continue her quest for a master’s degree at Ohio University.  She attended the Summit while a student at the University of Colorado and after graduation there, went to the acclaimed Ohio University program in documentary photography.  When finishing her thesis and course work, she will intern at the Dallas Morning News this spring and then move to an internship at the Washington Post.


Workshop Faculty regular James Balog attends UN Climate Change Conference

Posted: December 22nd, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: Alumni News, Exhibits/Special Events | No Comments »

James Balog, a regular teacher at the Summit Workshops over the years, continues to attract attention with his latest project using 30 Nikon cameras in all-weather housings to record some of the world’s shrinking glaciers.  His previous projects, which he has described at the evening sessions at the Summit have included an ode to the world’s endangered species followed by an innovative book of portraits of the nation’s greatest trees.

Balog, founder and director of the Extreme Ice Survey, represented NASA and the U.S. State Department at the Copenhagen United Nations Climate Change Conference, COP 15. Over the course of the 12-day conference, he has presented a total of six times—five times on behalf of NASA and once on behalf of the World Wildlife Fund—about the Extreme Ice Survey’s ongoing photographic documentation of stunningly rapid glacial retreat and the implications of these findings.

“I am profoundly honored to participate in this landmark climate change conference and to share our work with government officials, policy-makers and concerned citizens from all over the world,” Balog says. “NASA’s sponsorship is a tremendous vote of confidence in EIS and its mission.”

En route to COP 15, at the invitation of the Alaska Conservation Foundation, Balog spoke at an event in New York City at the home of Susan and David Rockefeller, Jr. and made a live appearance on CNN Newsroom. Since arriving in Copenhagen, Balog has appeared in footage shown on CNN’s American Morning and was featured Tuesday on CNN.com’s Opinion Section.


Light painting with the Nikon D3 in Jackson Hole

Posted: December 22nd, 2009 | Author: admin | Filed under: Alumni News, In Print | No Comments »

The latest issue of “Jackson Hole” magazine, an elegant quarterly publication that goes all over the nation to frequent visitors to Jackson Hole, features a cover by chief photographer Brad Boner. (The magazine is an offshoot of the Jackson Hole News&Guide, their award-winning newspaper in Jackson.)   And on the contents page, Brad tells how he learned how to make the picture from attending a session with Dave Black in light painting at the fall Photography at the Summit Workshop.  Then with the help of Nikon’s Bill Pekala, used a D3 to capture all the details of the Milky Way and the entire northern sky.  A little moonlight lighted the mountains and to keep the balance, Brad “painted” the famed Moulton barn with —  a Maglite!  The stunning picture could never been made before the D3 high ISO capabilities with no noise.  Thus, the quality.