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Black
Rock Desert tracks, Nevada, 1985.

Missile,
Bravo 20 Bombing Range, Carson Sink, near Stillwater Wildlife Refuge,
Nevada, 1987.
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Water in the West
Arid Waters
The
Water in the West Project is a photographic response to the growing water
crisis that exists because our culture thinks of water as a commodity,
or an abstract legal right, rather than the most basic physical source
of life. The Water in the West project is a broad based collaboration
among thirteen other photographers; selections of our decade long commitment
are archived at the Center for Creative Photography at the University
of Arizona in Tucson. An important publication documents the origins of
the project and places it into context of collaborative photographic projects:
Arid Waters, edited by Peter Goin and Text by Ellen Manchester,
published by the University of Nevada Press in 1992.
Water
in the American West is sprayed from ornamental fountains, recycled through
human made waterfalls, and generated as ocean waves in land-locked wild
water oases. Although western states are growing in population at a phenomenal
rate, water resources have already been fully allocated. The ancient and
irreplaceable waters in the aquifers are being pumped out at an ever-increasing
rate. Also, as most of us know, the Colorado River , the Truckee River
where most Western water law was first adjudicated, and the American River,
like most if not all other western rivers, have been over-subscribed for
decades.
These
photographs represent nearly twenty years of documenting aridity
in lands previously ignored, exploited, or defined as well, simply ugly.
This series focuses on the Great Basin desert, defined as the large area
of interior drainage in the western United States comprising most of Nevada,
parts of Utah, Idaho, California, Wyoming, and Oregon, including the Great
Salt Lake, the Mohave Desert, Death Valley, and the Carson Sink. These
photographs provide visual evidence of stark desert horizons, dry reservoirs,
threatened wildlife refuges, and evaporating ponds, among others. Desert
lake beds are bleak reminders of the absence of water, and of the increasing
aridity of these areas. I have felt compelled to bear witness to the growing
crisis of water scarcity, which exists because we as people often fail
to understand the consequences of our water use (abuse).
As
plush, green lawns, fountains, and golf courses continue to replace sagebrush
and sand dunes, progress is hailed as inevitable. Clearly, most people
who live in these arid lands have yet to understand the long term implications
of aridity. We constantly expect greater precipitation than rainfall
averages indicate; irrigation, while making agriculture possible in the
desert, implicitly presents the illusion that aridity has been overcome.
Perhaps these photographs will serve as reminders of the land-and climate-in
which we all live.
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Cattle
watering trough just below the dam at Joshua Tree National Monument, 1994.

Floating
Figure, Padre Canyon and Bay, Lake Powell, Utah.
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