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Time Passes | 
enlarge | Author: Robert Adams Publisher: Thames & Hudson Category: Book
List Price: $40.00 Buy New: $24.31 You Save: $15.69 (39%)
New (17) Used (7) from $22.98
Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 212316
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 100 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7 Dimensions (in): 11.2 x 10.1 x 0.6
ISBN: 0500974993 Dewey Decimal Number: 779.367 EAN: 9780500974995 ASIN: 0500974993
Publication Date: April 28, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new item. Over 3.5 million customers served. Order now. Selling online since 1995. Few left in stock - order soon. Code: N20080825032054T
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Product Description A study of the shore, sea, and light in the American Northwest by a major figure in contemporary photography.
Robert Adams reveals the beauty of the American landscape, exploring lost paradises and areas threatened with destruction. Time Passes is a meditation on transience and on the promise inherent in beauty. The pictures were made near Adams's home in the American Northwest, a region once famous for its vast woodlands but now infamous for the ravages of industrial forestry. In the book the photographer turns away from environmental catastrophe in order to study the shore and sea and light. 32 tritone illustrations.
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| Customer Reviews:
Bewildered by Bob Again May 4, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
At first glance, "Time Passes" looks like a repeat of "West from the Columbia", a book Robert Adams published more than a decade ago--some of the pictures appear to be the same. However, opening the books side by side and attempting to match pictures reveals a surprise--even though the subject is the same (the place where the Columbia joins the Pacific, the ocean waves, light on the sea, trees on the shore), and while some of them appear like they may have been made on the same day, none of the images are actually the same.
Which still leaves the question open, why would a photographer, given the opportunity to make a new book, elect to make a new selection from a body of work already published in another form?
Given Robert Adam's well deserved reputation for the care with which he both creates and presents his work, it seems clear that he has returned to the same place and subject because he thinks there is more to be seen there. There are two clues as to what he may have intended. The first is a statement that this work was exhibited with images from both "West from the Columbia" and "Turning Back". The images from the latter project are especially difficult in places, as they document the ravaging of the forests of the Northwest. The second clue is found on the blurb on the dust jacket "Time Passes is a meditation on transience and on the promise inherent in beauty."
To stand by the sea and watch the waves, as Adams must have done on many days in order to make these photographs, is an act that seems to be full of both despair and hope. We know and he knows the damage he turns his back to, and the impossibility of stopping a wave. But each day, the light is different, the sky is different, the sea dances in a way both like it always was, and magically unique. What is the promise of beauty? The answer he gives is this--enough to justify setting up the camera, enough to hope.
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