Wednesday, June 6, 2012

The Santiam Restaurant

The Santiam Restaurant is a student-run, fine dinning eating establishment on the campus of Linn-Benton Community College. This is no average eatery, the chefs-in-training are very serious about their career and the wait staff are very devout to the excellence to the service.



Instructor Scott Hurrley reads from a recipe book.


Preparing the next meal



An instructor demonstrates a dish preparation








Jessica Jerrett(far left), Shea Henthorn, Molly Ward(far right), and the rest of the dinning staff make plans for the days meal.



A table by the window prepared for high class dinning.











Ansel Adams


           Making Black and White Photography Cool: Ansel Adams



Through history mankind has been replicating images that mean something through paintings or photography. Whether it’s the majestic beauty of a snow covered mountain, or the sad reality of a homeless mother on the street corner giving her starving children the last scraps of spoiled food, images can be a very powerful thing. Photographers have captured the image of war, death, homeless, personal tragedy, joy, excitement, and most any other human emotion. However, with all the famous photographers in the world only one came to mind.

Since I spent most of my youth in Alaska, I grew up having a deep respect and love for nature. I recall having the love for a mountain, the fondness for trees, admiring the beauty of the rainbow, and the respect for the wildlife.  Ansel Adams also had a love of nature; moreover, he captured that respect and love with black and white photography.

Ansel Eston Adams was born in San Francisco in 1902 on Febuary 20. He was a difficult and rebellious student. By the age of 12, his farther stopped trying to make him attend and pulled him out of school. Adams, however, proved to be autodidact and became a gifted, self-taught musician.

In 1916 he got his first camera, Kodak Box Brownie, and began taking photo during a visit to Yosemite Nation Park. In 1917 and 1918 he even worked part time at a photo finishing business. He became employed by Yosemite Nation Park in 1919 as a custodian and led weekly expeditions around the park. He looked at his snap shots of the landscape and his “visual diary”. A 61/2*81/2-inch Korona view camera was then used for his galleries. He spent an afternoon on his most famous piece, Monolith, the Face of Half Dome, Yosemite National Park.

The more photos, the more he became involved with the park and the land and became a staunch conservationist. From 1934 to 1971 he became the director of the Sierra Club. In 1940 he helped to form the curatorial department devoted to photography at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City.

In 1980 Adams was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Ansel Adams died as the most important landscape photographer of the 20th century on April 22, 1984, in Carmel, California