Saturday night I was at a gathering that included Michael Lundgren, a photographer visiting from Arizona where he teaches and works. He’d brought along a portfolio of prints from his Transfigurations series, images that will be included in his upcoming book by the same title to be published at the end of this year by Radius Books.
The photographs in the series work together beautifully, murmuring softly to each other, echoing each other’s forms or textures or moods. With bodies of interrelated work like this it’s almost a shame to isolate a single image. But books being what they are, you generally have space on the front cover for just one, and the one that was picked for Transfigurations is a beauty.
So here we have a single, perfect, amazingly symmetrical juniper tree on a little rise or ledge overlooking an expanse of desert. It feels like the end of the day, that special time when the land seems to glow from within, when the earth seems to gently release its last reserves of the day’s light, like power discharging from a battery, as it prepares for night.
People often think of the desert as a hostile world, but for plants like this juniper that are adapted to what the desert offers and demands, there’s no better home.
To see more images, visit Michael Lundgren’s site.
I’m a tree nut, so to speak and I know what you mean about Junipers. They are one tough tree that will grow almost anywhere they find themselves. Your dessert variety is short and stubby, but mine in the backyard are around 20 ft. tall. The birds love to nest there.
It is a beautiful image of a truly beautiful tree. I love that they provide such great shelter for the birds. No wonder they chose it for the cover.