Thursday, December 3, 2009

Featured Photographer: David Burdeny


For the first week or so of brisk, wintry weather, I often find myself ill-prepared to fend off the chill. Wasn't it just yesterday that I was breezin' right along, with a smile and a song, short-sleeved and feeling fine. Can it really be scarf and glove time already? But when this rosy-glassed outlook is at odds with the reality of the thermometer, and you find yourself scurrying home, breathing into your cupped hands, a bare neck seeking shelter in shrugged shoulders, there really is nothing quite like that first wave of warmth as you come through the front door of your cozy abode. Even if you soon realize that the thermostat is a good ten degrees below truly warm, that initial contrast between the arctic outside and the toasty interior can make all the difference. But since it's highly impractical to run outside every few hours just to experience that blissful juxtaposition, why not check out some of David Burdeny's beautifully austere photographs of icebergs in Greenland and Antarctica? The winner of the International Photography Awards Nature Photographer of the Year in 2008, Burdeny's frigid shots are guaranteed to make you feel just a bit warmer by comparison.
 


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