Dalles Mountain Road at Fivemile Creek, Klickitat County, Washington
- Title
-
Dalles Mountain Road at Fivemile Creek, Klickitat County, Washington
- LC Subject
-
Photography, Artistic
Photography
Landscape photography
Outdoor photography
Nature photography
Photography of water
art photography
black-and-white photography
gelatin silver prints
photography (discipline)
nature photography
- Creator
-
Toedtemeier, Terry
- Description
-
This is a long rectangular black and white photograph featuring a mountainous and rocky landscape. In the foreground is a stream flowing around and over rocks, moving towards a fork. The moving white water exhibits soft edges, a sharp contrast to the dark and craggy terrain. In the background are plateau tops and monotone dark clouds.
Dallas Mountain Road (sic)
The Oregon Arts Commission has ten Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is Mid-Valley Arts. You may view their website at http://www.oregonlink.com/arts/index.html
- View
-
full
- Location
-
Department of State Lands >> Marion County >> Oregon >> United States
Marion County >> Oregon >> United States
- Street Address
-
775 Summer St. N.E., Salem Oregon
- Award Date
-
1989
- Identifier
-
1990_salem_state-lands-bldg_11_c01
- Item Locator
-
TOE: 90-22
- Accession Number
-
1990_salem_state-lands-bldg_11_c01
- Rights
-
In Copyright
- Dc Rights Holder
-
Toedtemeier, Terry
- Type
-
Image
- Format
-
image/tiff
- Measurements
-
8 3/4 x 18 1/2 inches
- Material
-
Photography
b&w gelatin silver print
- Set
-
Oregon Percent for Art
- Primary Set
-
Oregon Percent for Art
- Relation
-
1990 State Lands Building Salem Oregon
1990_salem_state-lands-bldg
- Has Version
-
slide; color
- Institution
-
Oregon Arts Commission
University of Oregon
- Color Space
-
RGB
- Biographical Information
-
The Columbia River Gorge is a unique geologic environment and a place that has been of primary importance to humans in the region for well over 100 centuries. The only near-sea-level passage through the Cascade Mountains, the Gorge is in part the result of catastrophic floods dating from the close of the Ice Age. These floods, often called the Bretz floods after the geologist J. Harlan Bretz, who first hypothesized their existence, scoured the ancestral valley walls of the Coloumbia to produce the myriad basalt cliffs, promontories, and waterfalls one finds today. Left exposed in stone is a story of tremendous volcanic outpourings and the formative mechanics of the Cascade Mountains. As a photographer I have worked to record the beauty of varied natural formations in the Gorge and the many places there than reveal traces of former human activity. The Gorge is like a kind of container of time capsule that has accumulated countless elements of both human and natural history. It is a setting that richly juxtaposes time in human terms with a landscape millions of years in the making. (OAC documentation)