sand & skin • figure studies • nevada desert

outdoors, personal
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I am digging into my film archives lately & rediscovering some wonderful images that I have not seen in a long time. I am surprised by how the texture of film is really so different than digital–and how much a I have missed grain & didn’t know it. I’ve been seduced by the clarity of countless pixels, feeling them to be clean like a shower after many days of camping. But I love grain the way you love being dirty & sweaty those first days before the shower–luxuriating in the texture that is your skin + nature.

Max & I wandered off the road into the sand dunes some years ago in the desert outside of Las Vegas. It was a scorching hot day, but the sand beckoned us to walk & walk & walk…and feeling it on my skin when I laid down on it felt really sensuous–like the earth massaging me with her warm hands.

After a bit of shooting & exploring, we found out upon trying to leave that our car was bottomed out in the sand. After a few earnest but futile attempts to escape, we followed the sound of ATVs signaling a human presence that might help us. We trekked toward it & found an RV parked in the middle of nowhere on the dunes. Answering our knock at the door, a man emerged looking quite baked by the sun (& likely by other substances), no doubt having been camped & having an ATV-driving brand of fun for more than a couple days. But as disheveled as they were, he & his friends (likewise baked) pulled our Ford Focus out of the sand, chained to their muscle pick-up. Thank God.

But before our detour, Max & I shot some images of the desert & some figure studies. Here are some of mine. I think Max’s of me are much more interesting…but then again, I took off a lot more clothes than he did…


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4 thoughts on “sand & skin • figure studies • nevada desert

  1. Hi Alice – I love your logo and your blog. I’d love to have you shoot some photos for me at some point… hoping for a special time to do this. Will keep you posted! * Lulu

  2. BEAUTIFUL PICTURES. THOSE ARE REAL ARTSY PHOTOS. AND YOUR MODEL IS NOT BAD LOOKING EITHER 🙂

  3. I too miss the grain. We get caught up in the need for clarity and ever sharper pictures that we forget the purpose of photography; It certainly isn’t just being in focus. I love your analogy by the way. Great shot Alice, I love the one Max’s arm in the foreground

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