Jeffrey Conley is one of the world’s most renowned contemporary landscape photographers. Whether in the United States, Iceland, New Zealand or the Engadine in Switzerland – his sublime images do not depict the landscape; they reveal nature, experienced as a spiritual place.
Ansel Adams, one of the most important landscape photographers in the medium’s history, clearly indicated in his personal letters that since his experience of nature was fundamentally mystical, his most persistent artistic problem was how to convert that experience into physical evidence. The meditative radiance of Conley’s photographs is a logical consequence of his focused and profoundly contemplative approach. His treatment of perspective, scale and lighting yields images of unparalleled simplicity and tranquillity. Conley is also brilliantly versed in printing techniques: whether silver gelatin, platinum or pigment prints on bamboo paper, the works are all produced by hand with meticulous care and in-depth expertise. The artist leaves nothing to chance, from the surface structure and quality of the paper to the coloring and hand-coating of the prints. His mastery can be fully appreciated only by looking at the original prints: a velvety surface and the rich gradation of blacks and greys recall drawings in pen and ink and yet, at the same time, they are an eloquent ode to classical photography.
“For all of us, the Earth sustains our existence. In an otherwise inhospitable known universe, our little blue planet provides us absolutely everything. I’ve never understood why our societal and spiritual priorities as a species do not overwhelmingly demonstrate our gratitude by placing our planet at the pinnacle of the reverential order.
Nature is constant change, and photography is particularly well suited to capture and amplify the swirling fluidity and the wonderfully serendipitous moments born of the ephemeral. Photographing nature is a very specific kind of exercise in mindfulness. The photographs in this exhibition represent some of my observations while investigating nature over these last several years. Moments that represent my awe, wonder, and affinity towards our Earth.” Jeffrey Conley