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Rhapsody in Blue

Italy
Antarctica

Why make so much of fragmentary blue
In here and there a bird, or butterfly,
Or flower, or wearing-stone, or open eye,
When heaven presents in sheets the solid hue?

Since earth is earth, perhaps, not heaven (as yet)—
Though some savants make earth include the sky;
And blue so far above us comes so high,
It only gives our wish for blue a whet.

– Robert Frost

Tahiti
Fiji
Mongolia

I have found myself dwelling on the color blue and the way our planet’s elemental hue, the most symphonic of the colors, recurs throughout our literature as something larger than a mere chromatic phenomenon — a symbol, a state of being, a foothold to the most lyrical and transcendent heights of the imagination.

– Maria Popova

Togo
Japan
India

“Blue is light seen through a veil.”

– Henry David Thoreau

Burma
United States
Afghanistan

Blue is the typical heavenly color…
The ultimate feeling it creates is one of rest…”

– Wasily Kandinski

France
India
Cambodia

“I saw in a blue haze all the world poured
flat and pale between the mountains.”

– Annie Dillard

Uzbekistan
Morocco
Mali

“We love to contemplate blue,” Goethe wrote, “not because it advances to us, but because it draws us after it.”

Italy
Afghanistan

Blue is the unspoken language of universality,
seamlessly weaving through the expanse of
sky and the depths of water.

Philippines

“No water, no life. No blue, no green”

– Sylvia Earle

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E X H I B I T I O N S

STEVE McCURRY : THE ENDLESS TRAVELER

Peter Fetterman Gallery
Santa Monica, CA

Sat, Jan 27, 2024 –  Sat, Apr 27, 2024

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ICONS

Seaworks Maritime Precinct
The Main Shed
Melbourne, Australia

Wed, Feb 28, 2024 – Sun, May 26, 2024

___________________________________

NEW BOOK
D E V O T I O N

Reproduced in stunning color, these photographs honor the universal desire to create meaning in the midst of everyday life and offer viewers an opportunity to connect with their own spirituality—whatever form that takes.

More about Devotion here –
https://www.stevemccurry.com/news/steve-mccurry-presents-devotion

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The Power of Red

Namibia
United States

Red has always been my color
because red stands out. 
Red is one of the strongest colors, its blood,
it has a power with the eye.
That’s why traffic lights are red I guess, and stop signs as well…
In fact, I use red in all of my paintings.
– Keith Haring

India
Guatemala
India

Red is the greatest clarifier – bright and revealing. I can’t imagine becoming bored with red – it would be like becoming
bored with the person you love. 
– Diana Vreeland

Japan
India

Red is uplifting. 
– J. Lewis

Myanmar

Red protects itself. No color is as territorial.
It stakes a claim, is on the alert against the spectrum.
~ Derek Jarman

Tibet

India

When I haven’t any blue, I use red.
– Pablo Picasso

India
Tibet

I love red so much,
I almost want to paint everything red.
– Alexander Calder

Afghanistan

Japan
Myanmar

Red, of course, is the color of the interior of our bodies.
In a way it’s inside out, red. 
– Anish Kapoor

Russia
Myanmar

Red is the ultimate cure for sadness.
– Bill Blass

Jordan
Italy

Red can communicate all sorts of messages.
Red symbolizes passion, action, energy, happiness,
authority, strength, and confidence…
– Adam Glassman

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E X H I B I T I O N S

ICONS

Loyola University Museum of Art
Chicago, IL, USA

Fri, Oct 20, 2023 – Wed, Mar 27, 2024

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ICONS

Arsenali Repubblicani
Pisa, Italy

Mon, Jan 1, 2024 –  Sun, Apr 7, 2024

___

STEVE McCURRY : THE ENDLESS TRAVELER

Peter Fetterman Gallery
Santa Monica, CA

Sat, Jan 27, 2024 –  Sat, Apr 27, 2024

___

STEVE McCURRY

Cavalier Galleries
New York, NY

Thu, Feb 8, 2024 – Sat, Mar 30, 2024

___

ICONS

Seaworks Maritime Precinct
The Main Shed
Melbourne, Australia

Wed, Feb 28, 2024 – Sun, May 26, 2024

___________________________________

NEW BOOK
D E V O T I O N

Reproduced in stunning color, these photographs honor the universal desire to create meaning in the midst of everyday life and offer viewers an opportunity to connect with their own spirituality—whatever form that takes.

More about Devotion here –
https://www.stevemccurry.com/news/steve-mccurry-presents-devotion

Categories
Uncategorized

Quite Unlike Any Land

‘This is Burma’, wrote Rudyard Kipling.
‘It will be quite unlike any land you know about.’

Rangoon

Each day these nuns walked a circuit around the city. McCurry asked if he could walk with them to make photographs. With their consent, he accompanied them for several days, searching for the best light and location. Even without their presence, this residential area could make a colourful image. With their presence, McCurry deliberately sought a rainy day in order to have some control over the level of color in the image. The line of their parasols echoes the yellow horizontal and creates the commentary of an adjacent hue upon the red brick.
– Anthony Bannon

Inle Lake

The fishermen of the Inle Lake are famous for the way they paddle their boats using their legs. The conical nets are dropped into the shallow waters to catch the fish.

 

In the unique watery world of Inle Lake, Intha fisherman row canoes with one leg, gardens float, and wooden homes perch above the water on rickety stilts.
– Catherine Bodry

Kyaiktiyo

The Golden Rock is an important Buddhist site. McCurry spent days there determining the best vantage point and time. The picture was taken about 10 minutes after sunset. “The lights which illuminate the rock at night have just been turned on and provide an accent light and shadow on the right.” from ‘Steve McCurry’
– Anthony Bannon

Bagan

Bagan

Bagan

Burma

Bagan

Burma

Bagan

There is a gentleness and an elegance to the Burmese people, and the role that Buddhism plays
in everyday life is very evident.
– Steve McCurry

Inle Lake

Taung Kalat, Mt. Popa

The stairway is narrow and steep as it climbs a 300-foot lava plug crowned by Buddhist temples. The plug rises from the slope of Mount Popa an extinct volcano, where thousands of pilgrims flock each May to a festival honoring a multitude of terrestrial spirits called nats. Burma’s Buddhists have a healthy respect for the nats, who bestow favors on those who honor them and inflict punishment on non-believers.

Bagan

Two novice monks head back to their monastery in the late afternoon after doing some errands in the town of Bayon. Bagan, Myanmar, 2010.

Bagan

I photographed this young child with thanaka on his face in Bagan. Thanaka is a paste made from tree bark, and while often used as decoration, it also provides protection from sunburn. It is applied in patterns and designs.
– Steve McCurry

Mingun Pagoda

Earthquakes caused these deep cracks to appear in the incredible Mingun Pagoda. Built to house a relic of the Buddha, the brick structure was originally intended to be over 150 meters tall. However, the technology was not capable of enabling its full construction and so it reaches 30 meters. Framed by the massive entrance, three monks are seen climbing the crumbling steps.

Inle Lake 

An Intha fisherman paddles his boat on Inle Lake in Burma/Myanmar. The Intha fishermen of Inle Lake, a highland freshwater lake, are famous for the way they paddle their boats using their legs.
Some Intha people live at the edge of the lake, but others grow vegetables in floating gardens and live
in houses on stilts.

 

Join Steve McCurry on a nine-day photography workshop and take your photography skills to the next level.  Steve will be leading a workshop in Burma from
February 19th to 27th, 2021.