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Mail Tribune Life Section
January 26, 2007
Marc Adamus shot this self-portrait while hiking in the Three Sisters Wilderness east of Eugene in December 2005. (Photo by Marc Adamus)

No winter of discontent for him

Corvallis calendar picture-taker says winter scenes are his favorites

By MIKE STAHLBERG

CORVALLIS — Another year, another calendar.

Which makes this an ideal time to meet Marc Adamus, a 27-year-old Corvallis outdoorsman whose backpacking and camping trips result in spectacular scenes for calendars, coffee table books, magazines and wall art.

Bold, dramatic landscape photographs are Adamus' stock in trade.

"Patience and persistence" — not to mention an eye for shape and light and a passion for immersing himself in the landscape — are the keys to his art.

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"My photography comes from a lifelong passion for wilderness adventure," said Adamus, who spent "over 200 days out in the field this last year."

That included a 65-day photo safari in the Rocky Mountains, during which Adamus "spent just one night in a motel ... so it's definitely a labor of love."

Adamus' love of the outdoors — acquired from his father, Paul, a wetlands biologist and avid bird watcher — preceded his love of photography.

His interest in photography began with a camera he received as a Christmas gift when he was about 15 years old. But he didn't become "seriously" involved in photography until he made the switch from film to digital cameras about three years ago.

In that short time, the self-taught photographer — "I've never taken any formal classes or training," he says — has produced an extensive portfolio of impressive photos. And he's seen them published worldwide in calendars, books and magazines — as well as being viewed extensively on the Web.

A photo Adamus took last year of waves crashing against rocks on the Oregon Coast won the Art Wolfe Award for landscape photography at the Environmental Photography Invitational in Seattle. His work has been selected for publication in seven different magazines, including Outdoor Photographer and, in an upcoming issue of Popular Photography. And he has photographs in several 2007 calendars, including the Time Catcher and Discover America calendars.

While his work becomes more widely circulated with each passing year, Adamus is "a little-known gem of Oregon," said Alan Contreras of Eugene, who purchased rights to use Adamus photos as book covers.

"I have looked at a lot of outdoor photos over the years, and I think his work is world class," Contreras said. "People are starting to call him 'Ansel Adamus.' "

That reference, of course, is a play on the name Ansel Adams, arguably America's pre-eminent landscape photographer.

"Ansel Adams definitely was an inspiration for me, as he was for most landscape photographers," Adamus said. "It would be almost impossible to not realize some inspiration from Ansel's work."

Ansel Adams' greatest genius may have been in the darkroom, where he used various photo printmaking techniques to squeeze maximum visual impact out of his negatives.

Adamus said his use of Photoshop computer software is "a very similar process" that helps bring out the "dynamic range" of colors in his digital photographs, giving them the look of oil paintings.

Adamus said he does not digitally alter the content or composition of his photographs in any way.

"When adjustments are made, it is always limited to fine tuning of color, exposure and tones. ... In the film days, it would be the equivalent of choosing different film and filter combinations," he said.

Adamus says his Internet page draws an average of 8,000 visitors a month. It contains links to several "slide shows" featuring images in several categories, including "mountain and winter landscapes" and "deserts of the southwest."

While his work is featured in books and calendars, Adamus said he has no immediate plans to do a "solo" book or calendar project featuring only his photos because of time constraints.

Simply being in the right place when the light is right, one of the keys to his work, consumes much of his time. Last year, Adamus put more than 60,000 miles on the Subaru he often sleeps in, plus uncounted miles on hiking boots and skis in search of right places.

"Photography is such a game of patience," Adamus said. "You're almost never going to go to an area the first time and capture the defining images. You have to get to know the area, you have to learn the light and the seasons ...

"And you've got to get beyond just the basic automatic functions of your camera if you want to capture a landscape to its full potential. You have to learn to tell your camera what you want it to do, not just what it wants you to do."

Mountains in winter are Adamus' favorite subject, so he spends a lot of time on skis and snowshoes, often traveling alone.

"Fresh snow just transcends the landscape like nothing else," he said, "and you can find such solitude, such peacefulness in the mountain landscape."

On the Net:

Marc Adamus: http:wildphoto.smugmug.com/

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