Jeff Mitchum featured in “Rangefinder Magazine”. Click on image to enlarge and read.
MORE:October 21st, 2011
September 8th, 2011
July 15th, 2011
June 12th, 2011
April 19th, 2011
January 17th, 2011
November 4th, 2010
July 18th, 2010
After achieving some of the highest acclaim ever given to a fine art book with “Seasons of Light, volume I”, Jeff is proud to announce the scheduled release of three new limited edition books later in 2010. To be entitled, “Islands of Light”, “Seasons of Light volume 2″, and “Light of Israel”, the upcoming books will live up to the standards set by “Seasons of Light, volume I”, which is considered by many to be the most unique and museum quality collectors book to date.
MORE:The first edition run of each limited edition book will be 1000, with 250 being designated Collectors Editions. The Collectors Editions will have a beautifully inlayed gold leaf, with the book’s title presented on an oyster cloth clam shell cover. Each Collector’s Edition will also have a 7 x 20 inch print enclosed. The print will be signed and dedicated by Jeff.
The 750 Limited Editions will all be signed, and are available for pre-order.
Each of the editions are UV spot printed. UV spot printing is considered the finest quality printing available today, and the only printing method capable of true reproduction of Jeff’s original film. The books are hand bound, one book at a time, after each page dries for up to a week. We highly recommend you pre-order at these pre-release prices as the releases sell out quite quickly and rise in price as the edition sells out. “Seasons of Light, Volume 1″, is closing out the last 50 at $2500!
Please contact Jeff Mitchum Galleries, and we will be happy to assist with your pre-order.
A portfolio of the dramatic tropical escapes we have come to love, featuring Jeff’s unique style and presentation.
A compilation of Jeff’s award winning museum collection, depicting Israel’s hidden beauty.
A visual journey through the amazing diversity of Jeff’s images, captured throughout the world.
Collectors Edition – pre-order price, $350. Price at release, $500 to $700
Limited Edition – pre-order price, $125. Price at release, $175
For more information, please visit the “Collector’s Books” section of jeffmitchum.com
CLOSE:July 2nd, 2010
Today, Jeff was honored to participate in a fantastic event benefitting the Boys and Girls Club of Las Vegas. Hosted by Howard and Suzie Lederer at Golden Nugget, the Word Series of Barbecue & Celebrity Charity Poker Tournament was truly an event to remember. Raising over $216,000 for the Boys and Girls Clubs, the evening included games, food, and was capped off by a dazzling fireworks display. In order to capture the sprit of the event, the Lederer’s asked Jeff to create a special, commemorative image. Jeff decided to capture this exquisite new fine art image from a location perched atop a ladder high on a rooftop. The results, COMING SOON, promise to be extraordinary.
MORE:A short documentary video, entitled “Overture, the Making of an Image” was recorded by Jeff Mitchum Galleries, and is available to view in our Videos section here.
For more information on this wonderful event, visit the facebook page http://www.facebook.com/worldseriesofbarbecue
or the event home page http://wsobcharitypoker.com/index.html.
June 15th, 2010
Jeff sat down with Outside Journal today, recounting some of his many adventures in landscape photography. Excerpts from the interview:
MORE:Which one do you want to know about? (laughing). One year when I was working with the Grizzlies in Katmai National Park, (the place where Timothy Treadwell and his girlfriend Anne Hugenot were eaten by that old bore a few weeks later) and photographing a momma and her two not so little ones along the river. The moon was rising over the river and my two friends from England Matt and Josh were getting some really images of reflections. It was about 10pm and the momma and her not-so-little kids finally get out of the water so we can walk down the trail.
They disappeared into the tall grass and I gave them 10 minutes to clear the area before walking down that pathway. As soon as we start walking, guess who’s coming for desserts? She sees we have closed ground and changed location and with her head down, charges us.
She was so close I could smell what she had for dinner. In my calmest voice, I shared with her that it would be a really bad idea to eat me because if she did, I’d die, and then they would have to shoot her. And then just as fast as she closed ground, something moved her to turn around and disappear into the grass again.
Later, Matt and Josh asked what I would have done if she decided to sample one of us. They were shocked that I simply planned to out run one of them. Last man loses and I live. Besides, they don’t have kids. In college, situational ethics of philosophy taught me to think like that. College is good for things like this.
A pair of leather Birkenstocks! Look, Moses and the children of Israel owned one pair for 40 years and they still had tread. I still don’t know why Nike hasn’t captured this ad campaign. Forget Jordan and Tiger, you have Moses! You can wear them in a semi casual event to running around town, or wander nomadically for a generation in them. They go with practically everything and if you wear them often enough you never get athletes foot!
Never believe your press releases! As soon as you do, your humor is left behind. We’re blessed in unique ways. Every one of us are a once in a lifetime uniquely created individual. When your mind is free you can live without the burden of being something you’ll never be.
Bert Boeckmann, the owner of Galpin Ford, Jaguar, Mercedes, Aston Martin, Honda and a whole lot of others. Let me say this… He is California’s most successful businessman. Think about this, his dealership has been the number one volume dealership not just in California, or the United States, or North America, but the entire world for over 30 consecutive years.
Think about the Lakers being world champions for over 30 consecutive years? A great thought, but Bert has done it. He should run our country. On top of all that, he once told me he never has had the flu in his entire life. Talk about a business role model!
My late step dad. I just called him “The Captain”. He had kidney cancer and he never once complained about all the procedures and intense pain. I remember working on this ingrown toe nail and making him soak his toes in hot water and epsom salt. This nail was embedded and I work on it for an hour and he sat there and never winced.
He was protecting all of us, especially my mother. They had this unrivaled marriage of love. It was storybook in every aspect. He was the toughest because he was truly selfless in love. He never considered his own needs to protect the ones he loved most. The “Captain” was manhood defined.
As a photographer, nothing makes me more proud than to have someone say to me, or even to overhear someone saying, that one of my images makes them want to go to the location and visit for themselves. Bringing Nature’s great wonders to people is what I love to do, but there is a much more important component to it all that is much bigger than me, or the photography itself. What is especially wonderful is the emotional response my pieces can elicit from people, and as a result, the bond that develops between us and Nature’s great wonders. These locations are truly great gifts for us and for future generations, and when people fall in love with them enough to take them home and make them a daily part of their lives, they also want to protect and preserve them.
That’s the higher purpose; the real, lasting mission. My photography is my life’s work, but the role that it can play in protecting the locations I was blessed to be able to shoot is so much more. That’s a legacy, and it’s a special honor.
Travel in the world of your creations and imagination.
Ask my 8 year old little girl. Little girls have a lot of power over their dads. Michaela walks in during a very busy meeting and, “Daddy, would you help me with…” And just like that they learn how to not play fair and learn control at my expense. The other one is, “Oh daddy…!”. My son Luke, he grabs anything that moves and then crawls into your lap and just hangs out.
Once I was in a float plane hugging the glaciers of Mt Redoubt on the way to the coast. The winds and weather were horrific. The pilot was ashen white. The whole situation seemed like it was going from bad to worse.
I remember an old Roman saying that “when death comes to visit, laugh in its face because you can’t do anything”. So, I came to the conclusion to just enjoy the ride. If the plane goes it goes, and people pay a lot of money for these roller coaster rides. That one flight cured me of the fear of flying. Float plane psychology!
Lance Armstrong! Not that I feel I could give him advice, I mean he is Saint Lance. He is probably the greatest athlete of our lifetime and knows what to do with his success: help others. That’s a rare attribute, but a transferable one. When you consider what he battled through with cancer and went on to win 7 Tour De France races, he has the qualities to be great at anything.
His focus, preparation, mental discipline and believe it or not Lance is quite teachable. He would be a great protégé that would teach me more than I would him. By the way, I am picking him to be top ten at Ironman Hawaii 2011.
Yes, I’m an accomplished matchmaker! Seriously, I believe I have actually set up about 7 couples who have gone on to marry.
That’s laughable! I am a finite being asked to do an infinite work that no one can comprehend. That is a recipe for major mistakes, and I do not want that type of responsibility. But, if I could have one wish fulfilled it would be to eliminate cancer. So many wonderful and amazing lives are touched by this disease. We have to find a cure and support organizations involved in the battle.
When I am snowshoeing with a ton of camera equipment on my back and need to get down a hill fast, I am extremely skilled at being a human bobsled. You find a long snow filled chute that’s not an avalanche issue. Take your snow shoes off and secure to your backpack. Then with your pack on, you launch yourself down the chute and when you
start getting out of control, lean back on your pack and lean on your tripod like an ice axe.
It’s crazy survival fun. You can cover several thousand feet in less than 2 minutes. Gets you down fast, safe and, no lift ticket is required!
CLOSE: