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    <title>TerraNovaPhotography's recent photos</title>
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    <description>Robert E. Younger began taking pictures as a kid, quickly moving from a small Brownie to borrowing his parents&amp;#8217; more sophisticated 35mm camera. But after discovering the possibilities of large-format cameras--awkward-looking contraptions that look like throwbacks to the age of silent movies--Younger progressed from picture taking to making photographs. He likens this artistic process of visualizing and then recording images on film to the way a painter imagines scenes and then puts those mental pictures on canvas.

It is the large-format camera itself--Younger uses an 8x10--that offers the photographer this kind of control. First, larger negatives require less enlargement, resulting in sharper prints and finer textures. Second, the camera&amp;#8217;s accordion pleats, tiltable lens, and moveable film plane allow for infinite adjustments. 

Now a master of his art, Younger tells a story with each photograph&amp;#8212;from vast landscapes or dramatic architecture to intricate details of wood, rocks or beach sand. Further, each image can be viewed as a metaphor for places, ideas and experiences beyond the scene itself&amp;#8212;providing both a window into the artist&amp;#8217;s heart and a mirror reflecting new insights into the viewer&amp;#8217;s own thoughts and experiences. A branch can become the entire forest; a window, the world.</description>
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    <pubDate>Fri, 22 Oct 2004 13:20:06 -0700</pubDate>
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    <copyright>Copyright 2009, the copyright holder of each photograph.  Some portions copyright SmugMug.  All rights reserved.</copyright>
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