Message from Robert Walter
    
      
      
ARTIST'S STATEMENT
 
 My images explore hidden worlds I can hold in the palm of my hand.  
 This exploration starts on mountain trails or along the beach where 
 I come across pebbles, bits of driftwood, leaves, fronds, bark, 
 seed pods and beach rocks that I take back to my studio and expand 
 into extreme photographic close-ups.
 
 What I repeatedly discover in surface areas sometimes less than 
 one-inch-square is that the fire that forged the rock is still 
 within the rock.  But so is the surging ocean and so are mythical 
 figures and vast landscapes. The same possibilities hold true for 
 my other finds.
 
 Due to most of the worlds I uncover being found in very small places, 
 my working process involves enlarging, enhancing and intensifying 
 the essence of these tiny realms. I like to print big because when 
 the sense of scale and the starting place are no longer evident 
 then we are left to focus on the beating heart of the matter.
 
 While I want my images to stand on their own, if they succeed 
 it is because they are completely nature-based.  Since they start 
 as photographic records of actual objects, they are encoded with 
 shapes and colors that can surprise, delight and sometimes shock us 
 with a flash of recognition.  I believe this resonance is due to 
 fractal patterning.  
 
 The idea of fractals -- that certain shapes and forms repeat themselves 
 again and again in a wide range of sizes -- is a powerful organizing 
 force that can trigger memories of where we have been and what we have seen.
 
 Being able to find these fractal crossroads in surprisingly small objects 
 adds a layer of poignance to their contemplation.  Under our feet, 
 sometimes even in our own backyards, are whole worlds waiting for our 
 glance and it feels to me that by discovering them, we might come to find 
 a part of ourselves along the way.
 
 ABOUT THE ARTIST:
 Robert Walter's artistic career has spanned several decades.  As an actor 
 he was a founding member of the Company Theater -- the first theater west 
 of the Hudson River to receive NEA funding.  As a music producer and  
 sound designer he has worked on films that run the gamut from Halloween to 
 Apocalypse Now, and has designed sound for major theme park attractions 
 such as Universal Studios' Earthquake.  He is one of the leading audiobook 
 producer/directors working for publishers such as Random House and Time Warner.  
 As a writer he has won awards for scripts such as National Geographic's 
 Honoring the Earth Seeking the Stars, and created the book Sustainable Cities.  
 As past president of The Eco-Home Network, a southern California environmental 
 organization, he has written  and spoken eloquently as an advocate for healing 
 our planet.  Now, he channels this same passion for communicating the beauty 
 and uniqueness of our Earth into his current visual work that he calls 
 the Fractal Dance.
 
 ABOUT THE WORK PROCESS:
 
 While a few of my images are photographed with a traditional macro lens, 
 almost all of them have been captured using a scanner as my digital camera.  
 The images are then taken into Photoshop where they are refined. 
 
 Because the scanner has no depth of field, there is sometimes a lengthy 
 piecing together of many different scans to achieve the total sharp 
 high-resolution image.  I bring colors out using Photoshop's various 
 brightness and contrast tools and by increasing saturation, and turn to 
 color spectrum modification only if that is what it takes to produce the 
 most dramatic rendering of the subject.  Above all, the prime intention 
 is to honor and extol what nature has wrought. 
 
 Once the image is complete, limited-edition archival prints are made.  
 The in-house printer allows me to print on 17" wide paper, so the images 
 usually range somewhere between 16x20 to 16x42.  Larger print sizes are 
 made for sale when requested and for certain gallery situations where 
 bigger prints would aid the overall prese
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