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Seeing Time
Seeing Time
    Quick Index
    The Rephotographic Survey Project
    Revealing Territory
    Third View
    Yosemite in Time
    The Half-Life of History
    Time Studies
    Reconstructing the View
    Drowned River
    El Camino del Diablo
    Saguaros
    Sticks from the Sunrise Stick Game
    Pre-Arizona
    Purchase Prints or Book
SEEING TIME
MARK KLETT
FORTY YEARS OF PHOTOGRAPHS
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An online exhibition conceived and produced by photo-eye in honor of the launch of Mark Klett's forty year retrospective book, Seeing Time, published by the University of Texas Press, July 2020.

A selection of photographs from this online exhibition are also on view at photo-eye GALLERY in Santa Fe through September 2020.
The Half-Life of History
2001﹣2007
"Bill Fox and I had just finished working together on Third View when we agreed to undertake a new collaboration on six American deserts. Bill suggested we go first to Wendover, Nevada, where what was left of a former World War II air base, once the world’s largest, remains on the edge of the Salt Lake desert. We were sponsored as residents in Wendover by the Center for Land Use Interpretation and spent our first weeks exploring the once secret air base, now in ruins. The base was used to train bomber crews, including the ones who dropped the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945"
— Mark Klett, from Seeing Time, University of Texas Press, 2020
Time Studies
2003﹣2005
"In 2004 I began making a group of small-scale photographs that I thought of as “time and space equations.” They progressed out of a desire to do a project using film and to explore what I thought film could do better than nascent digital technologies. My thoughts were influenced by earlier work in rephotography and some unresolved questions about the relationship between time and change."
— Mark Klett, from Seeing Time, University of Texas Press, 2020
Reconstructing the View
2007﹣2010
"In the spring of 2007 Byron Wolfe and I considered the possibility of starting a new project. I suggested we take a trip to the Grand Canyon…. We were interested in taking up where the last project had ended, and the national parks seemed to offer opportunities as places of high image density…. We realized after the first week of fieldwork that the possibilities for making new work at the Grand Canyon were even greater than we had expected…. And the instant feedback we could receive by downloading digital images to a laptop offered us greater options while we were still on site, similar to the way the Polaroid film had given us on-site feedback in the past." — Mark Klett, from Seeing Time, University of Texas Press, 2020
Drowned River
2011﹣2016
"In 1963 the gates closed on a massive dam, blocking the Colorado River as it flowed past a seldom-visited scenic wonder called Glen Canyon. The Glen Canyon dam backed up 170 miles of river water along the border of southern Utah and northern Arizona, creating Lake Powell, the second-largest reservoir in the United States. Glen Canyon itself became submerged by the rising lake waters and eventually disappeared completely, but not before it was photographed by Eliot Porter and featured in a landmark book of color photography, The Place No One Knew: Glen Canyon on the Colorado (Sierra Club, 1963).

Our project began as a request to consider the challenge of working with a subject that we knew would no longer be accessible. Collin Westerbeck, then director of the California Museum of Photography, asked Byron Wolfe, Rebecca Solnit, and me to reprise the team we created for the Yosemite in Time project and collaborate once again in searching for what could be found of Porter’s Glen Canyon."
— Mark Klett, from Seeing Time, University of Texas Press, 2020
El Camino deI Diablo
2013 – 2015
"Today, most of the Camino del Diablo is on the Barry Goldwater Bombing Range, and the US-Mexico border is a militarized zone constantly patrolled by government agents and crisscrossed by air and ground forces practicing for war. Anti-immigrant politics and talk of a bigger border wall add an occupied feel to a place that already registers a history of violence and surveillance. Camino travelers often hide from detection, whether immigrants or drug smugglers, moving north under the cover of night or the ruggedness of the terrain. A still hostile climate kills many who dare travel in hot weather. Yet the Camino also crosses one of the wildest and most beautiful regions of the Sonoran Desert.

There’s a legacy of human presence on the Camino, sometimes tragedy, left only in traces. Signs of passage remain for centuries in Arizona’s dry climate. It is a route at the compelling intersection of transience, danger, and beauty." — Mark Klett, from Seeing Time, University of Texas Press, 2020
Saguaros
1987﹣2007
"I included the cacti in photographs as soon as I moved to Arizona in 1982. Then sometime around 1987 I started to make a series of what I considered to be saguaro portraits. I would find a cactus that interested me and walk around it, examining all sides. I made photographs of entire plants from a similar distance, showing top, bottom, and arms. The series was originally given the name Desert Citizens." — Mark Klett, from Seeing Time, University of Texas Press, 2020
Pre-Arizona
1979-1981
"I gave up making the photographs I had been working on outside of the RSP up to that point, color photographs made from 35 mm film that were formal explorations of ordinary urban scenes. I switched in favor of the black-and-white Polaroid process and found that it could be more personal, and I could include friends, events, and the places I visited. My practice became closer to my life at the time. I saw these photographs as my snapshots, and their departure from the concerns I had about art practice felt very liberating." — Mark Klett, from Seeing Time, University of Texas Press, 2020
Sticks from the Sunrise Stick Game
2019
"These sticks are made from various pieces of wood, metal, and artifacts found while on field trips throughout the West. They are used in a game called the Sunrise Stick Game that’s often played with traveling companions. The game was invented as a way to settle campfire arguments about where the sun would rise in the morning, a subject of interest to landscape photographers." — Mark Klett, from Seeing Time, University of Texas Press, 2020
Thank you for viewing our photo-eye online exhibition of SEEING TIME.
We are grateful to Mark Klett and The University of Texas Press for this opportunity to showcase this extraordinary work. 

Seeing Time online exhibition was produced using photo-eye's exciting new VisualServer X website builder — designed especially for the needs of photographers and artists.
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Purchase Prints from photo-eye Gallery
Purchase a copy of the signed book Seeing Time, University of Texas Press, 2020

Mark Klett signing books at Colorado's Elk Creek Campground during COVID-19 Pandemic
Yosemite in Time
2001﹣2003
"The idea for this project came from the writer Rebecca Solnit, who had recently finished the research for her book on the photographer Eadweard Muybridge, River of Shadows: Eadweard Muybridge and the Technological Wild West (2003). Rebecca proposed a new project to rephotograph Yosemite photographs Muybridge made in 1872. Byron Wolfe and I were just finishing the Third View DVD work, and we agreed to a three-person collaboration.

The project began by locating the sites and rephotographing Muybridge’s photographs in Yosemite National Park. Fieldwork involved the three of us camping together and visiting sites mutually chosen."
— Mark Klett, from Seeing Time, University of Texas Press, 2020
Seeing Time
The Rephotographic Survey Project
1977–1979
Revealing Territory
1982–2004
Third View
1997–2000
Yosemite in Time
2001–2003
The Half-Life of History
2001–2007
Time Studies
2003–2005
Reconstructing the View
2007–2010
Drowned River
2011–2016
El Camino del Diablo
2013–2015
Saguaros
1987–2007
Sticks from the Sunrise Games
2019


Pre-Arizona
1979–1981
Purchase Book and Prints
from photo-eye Books and Gallery
The Rephotographic Survey Project 
1977﹣1979

"The word “rephotographic” doesn’t exist in the English dictionary, but it was the word chosen to represent the spirit of the project Ellen Manchester and JoAnn Verburg and I created in 1977. The Rephotographic Survey Project (RSP) started as an idea, to track down the uncertain locations of historical nineteenth-century survey photographs of the American West and then make new photographs at those sites that were meant to duplicate the original images.

The project had three field seasons. In the first we rephotographed William Henry Jackson’s work for the 1873 Hayden Survey in Colorado. We expanded the scope in the second and third seasons to rephotograph the work of Timothy O’Sullivan, John K. Hillers, Andrew Russell, and other photographers for the King and Wheeler Surveys between 1867 and 1873." — Mark Klett, from Seeing Time, University of Texas Press, 2020
Teapot Rock and Sugar Bowl
1872 ﹣ 1979 ﹣ 1978 (color)
Inscription Rock
1873 ﹣ 1978
Monument Rock
1873 ﹣ 1978
Vermillion Creek Cañon
1872 ﹣ 1978
Green River Cañon
1872 ﹣ 1978
Quartz Mill Near Virginia City
1868 ﹣ 1978
Green River Buttes
1872 ﹣ 1979
Revealing Territory
1982﹣2004
"This work began when I moved to Arizona in early 1982, and it continued until 2004, around the time Polaroid’s Type 55 film was removed from the market. Initially the series owed its look to the photographs I’d been making of home and friends in Idaho, but the photographs became more focused on the landscapes of the Southwest and the history of issues related to human interaction with the land there."

— Mark Klett, from Seeing Time, University of Texas Press, 2020
Third View
1997﹣2000
"Third View added a third image to the pairs made during the Rephotographic Survey Project. It began exactly twenty years after the first rephotography project and used the same methods to repeat photographs made for the western surveys of the 1860s and 1870s. Photographs for this project continued to be made on film, but otherwise Third View differed from the RSP in the extended use of new technologies." — Mark Klett, from Seeing Time, University of Texas Press, 2020
Pyramid Lake
1878 ﹣ 1978 ﹣ 1988
Comstock Mines
1868 ﹣ 1979 ﹣ 1998
Edge of Storm Mountainain Reservoir
1869 ﹣ 1978 ﹣ 1999
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1872 — Timothy O’Sullivan, Tertiary Bluffs near Green River City, WY
8x10" Gelatin Silver print
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