Commentary Telling Marylands story
through photographs
Middleton Evans was 9 years old when he got his first camera,
a Kodak Instamatic. Three years later, his father gave him a
more expensive and sophisticated SLR camera. Thus began a love
affair with photography that has become a love affair with the
state of Maryland.Almost 30 years later, the books of Middleton
Evans grace coffee tables all across Maryland. In addition,
they are often given as gifts to visitors who take them to their
homes in other states and even other countries on the far side
of the world.Evans has seen a lot of changes in the technology
of photography since he took his first picture more than 30
years ago."I love digital photography," he says. "When
I first started publishing my pictures, all of the focusing
was done through a hit or miss process. Today, I can use auto-focusing
which makes it less challenging."However, Evans admits
that the magic of digital photography and computer editing has
raised a new issue for photographers."Photography is art,
and it's really all about integrity," he explains. "When
you change a photograph without full disclosure, it's misleading.
It's no better than when the Soviets would re-publish a picture
where a general or a politician had disappeared; they were trying
to change history. When you take a photograph, you're telling
the viewer that this is real, that nothing has been changed.
It's okay to alter a photograph for artistic purposes, and digital
photography has certainly given us that ability, but you must
fully disclose that fact."Evans graduated from McDonogh
School in Owings Mills and then went on to become an economics
major at Duke University."I never thought that photography
would become my life, but I did love it, and I served as the
photography editor for the Duke yearbook."When Evans graduated
from Duke, he came to realize very quickly that creating art
through the lens of a camera was his passion and his true unique
ability. In the early years, he photographed everything: weddings,
sporting events and architecture; but his true passion quickly
became wildlife."There is a dignity about wild animals,
no matter how small and insignificant they may seem."Evans
took some of his early wildlife pictures at game farms, where
for a fee he could spend the entire day photographing all types
of wildlife in all types of environments."If you wanted
to photograph a cougar standing on a rock, the managers of the
game park would arrange that," Evans recalls.While the
photographs were stunning and he developed an appreciation for
the majesty of wildlife, Evans felt, in a way, that he was cheating
his readers. The magic was in catching a wild animal in the
freedom of the wilderness."I wanted to publish books of
my photography," he says. "I knew I could write well,
and to that I owe a tremendous debt to the English teachers
at McDonogh, who helped me to develop that skill. This was so
important to me because I realized there was more to a book
of pictures than just the images themselves. Every picture has
a story if it was real."Thus began Middleton Evans' deep
love for the swamps, rivers, forests, beaches and people of
the state of Maryland.Evans will tell you that when he began
his career as a photographer, he knew nothing about what he
calls the "real Maryland." He began by exploring the
state from one end to the other: from St. Mary's City and Assateague
Island all the way out to the wilds of Allegany County.As he
hiked, he carried his camera equipment, which could weigh as
much as 20 pounds. He began to develop a deep appreciation for
the majesty of the flora and fauna around him, and he began
to hone his craft. Eventually, he began focusing on wild animals,
and especially birds. He realized that photographing these creatures
required careful observation, patience, patience and more patience."Animals
have a special rhythm to their movements. If you're going to
observe and photograph them, you have to calm your energy field
— that's the only way I can explain it — because
animals can read your excitement or tension instantly."Evans
published his first book two years after he graduated from Duke
in 1986. The title was "Maryland in Focus." Since
then, he has published many other books, most of which are instantly
recognizable by their distinctive and beautiful covers. However,
each book now takes about five years to produce."I realize
now that I am a storyteller," Evans says. "A good
part of each book is the story that is behind each photograph
I include."Currently, Evans is working on a book about
North American waterbirds, to which he has dedicated the past
seven years of his life. After that, a book about the wildlife
of Patterson Park will follow."You wouldn't believe it,
but almost a third of the more than 300 species of Maryland
birds have been identified in this park," he says. "One
of them is a Great Horned Owl, which is rarely seen.""There
is a huge difference between being a bird watcher and being
a bird photographer," Evans explains. "A bird watcher
observes and makes notes. A bird photographer begins a courtship
with the subject that can last several hours or even several
days."Evans had always wanted to photograph this owl, but
finding it was like the proverbial needle in the haystack."He
could be in any one of the 550 trees in the park," Evans
says, "and he could be 20 feet up or 120 feet up. To make
it harder, owls hunt at night."One day, Evans sensed that
this would be the day he would find his Great Horned Owl. He
began slowly walking around the park. Suddenly, he heard a ruckus
from a group of crows nearby."Owls are raptors," he
says, "and crows hate raptors."Suddenly, the owl appeared
before him, sitting on the end of a branch. Evans began to creep
forward, getting his camera ready. "Please don't fly,"
he breathed. The owl sat still, gazing at him with his huge
yellow eyes."The owl let me photograph him," says
Evans. "That's the only way I can explain it. The wild
creatures determine if you will be allowed to photograph them.""He
let me photograph him in five different trees, and I was able
to take 150 different pictures of him," Evans remembers.The
next year, a Red-tailed Hawk decided it was his turn to walk
the park. Evans courted him for several days until one morning,
he was able to take over 100 pictures as the raptor flew, preened,
posed haughtily, and even played with a stick on the ground.Neil
R.G. Young, the president of Young & Co., a financial planning
firm in Lutherville, writes a weekly column for The Daily Record
called "Eye on the Entrepreneur." The companies about
which he writes may be clients. The opinions expressed are Mr.
Young's. He can be reached at 410-494-7766.HOW TO FIND HIMUntil
now, Evans has marketed his art through bookstores and direct
order. In October, he entered the world of Internet marketing
through his beautiful new Web site, www.ravenwoodpress.com,
which is the name of his printing company.Knowing that most
people won't recognize this name, he has also used www.middletonevans.com
to point to his online catalogue. If you browse through it,
people around Maryland and around the world can enjoy the works
of this talented Maryland artist.