Camille Seaman: Photographer
Camille Seaman takes photographs all over the world using digital and film cameras in multiple formats. Since 2003, her work has concentrated on the fragile environment of the polar regions. Her current project concerns the beauty of natural environments in Siberia.
Seaman's photographs have been published in Newsweek, Outside, Zeit Wissen, Men's Journal and more, and she has self-published many books on themes like “My China” and “Melting Away: Polar Images” through Fastback Creative Books, a company that she co-founded. In 2008, she was honored with a one-person exhibition, The Last Iceberg, at the National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC.
Read the TED Blog's Q&A with Camille Seaman >>
Browse a gallery of stormcloud photos >>
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Gallery: Chasing storms with Camille Seaman
Posted by: Thu-Huong Ha
June 21, 2013 at 12:15 pm EDT
“It is not a death when [icebergs] melt; it is not an end, but a continuation of their path through the cycle of life.”
“Each iceberg has its own individual personality. … Some refuse to give up and hold on to the bitter end, while others can't take it anymore and crumble in a fit of dramatic passion.”
d: Jun 2013
Camille Seaman on the Web
Home: camilleseaman.com
http://www.camilleseaman.com/Artist.asp?ArtistID=3258&Akey=WX679BJN
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The Lovely Monster Over the Farm, Lodgepole, Nebraska. June 22, 2012 19:15 CST. / Photo: Camille Seaman
Camille Seaman: Photos from a storm chaser
A Shinnecock Indian, Camille Seaman has spent her career as a photographer illustrating the interconnected of all life. When she was a child, her grandfather took her outside to play on a hot summer day. He pointed to the sky and said, “Look, do you see that? That’s part of you up there. That’s your water that helps to make the cloud that becomes the rain that feeds the plants that feeds the animals.” Seaman, who gave today’s talk on storm chasing in the American Midwest, began her project in 2008, stalking these “lovely monsters,” as she calls them. Below, find 8 more astounding images from Seaman’s growing collection of storm photos, titled The Big Cloud.
EF-4 tornado, Bennington/Salina Kentucky. May 28, 2013
A Shinnecock Indian, Camille Seaman has spent her career as a photographer illustrating the interconnected of all life. When she was a child, her grandfather took her outside to play on a hot summer day. He pointed to the sky and said, “Look, do you see that? That’s part of you up there. That’s your water that helps to make the cloud that becomes the rain that feeds the plants that feeds the animals.” Seaman, who gave today’s talk on storm chasing in the American Midwest, began her project in 2008, stalking these “lovely monsters,” as she calls them. Below, find 8 more astounding images from Seaman’s growing collection of storm photos, titled The Big Cloud.
EF-4 tornado, Bennington/Salina Kentucky. May 28, 2013
Native American photographer Camille Seaman devotes years to her subjects, revealing the unfolding of reality over time. For the last decade, she has traveled repeatedly to the Arctic and Antarctic to take portraits of polar ice, witnessing the beauty and loss of a part of Earth most of us will never see. How do your […]
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