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Photographer Sets Special Cameras for 1,000-Year Exposure of Lake Tahoe

By Jessica Stewart on November 2, 2018

 

How will the Earth change over the next thousand years? That’s just one question that experimental philosopher Jonathon Keats will answer with Tahoe Timescape. Using the longest of long exposures, four of Keats’ specially developed Millennium Cameras will use a 1,000-year shutter speed to document the Tahoe Basin.


Tahoe Timelapse Project by Jonathon Keats

Pinhole view from Eagle Rock.




1천년 노출 셋팅된 카메라로 촬영된 타호 호수


다음 천년 동안 지구는 어떻게 변할 것인가? 그것은 실험 철학자 조나단 키츠가 타호 타임스케이프에게 대답할 질문이다. 긴 노출 중 가장 긴 노출을 사용하는, 특별히 개발된 4개의 키이츠 카메라가 1,000년의 셔터 속도를 사용하여 타호 분지를 기록할 것이다.


Keats first unveiled his Millennium Camera in 2015. It’s a simple copper camera with a pinhole drilled through a 24-karat plate. “This camera becomes a way for us to see ourselves from the far future, to reflect on the decisions that we make, but also it becomes a way to coalesce around a project in deep time,” Keats wrote at the time of its unveiling. “Can we, as a society, work with and around a project like this?”


Now, thanks to Tahoe Public Art, Keats is putting his invention to the test. Over the next 1,000 years, the Millennium Cameras will have their eyes on the environment, documenting every change—for better or worse—that is coming our way. Keats specifically chose the Tahoe Basin because it’s an environmentally sensitive area that is undergoing development, which he’s been witness to during his periodic visits over the past few decades.


Millenium Camera by Jonathon Keats

Millennium Camera


“Many of the challenges we face as a society today can be seen on and around Lake Tahoe,” Keats tells My Modern Met. “By bearing witness over the long term, we may not only be able to provide a record of our stewardship to future generations, but also to influence that stewardship by providing a thousand-year perspective on the impact of our present-day actions.”




In preparation for the project, Keats conducted site surveys with landscape photographer Ryland West. West documented all four vantage points by taking traditional landscape photographs as well as digital pinhole photos to give an idea of the type of imagery that could be expected. Thinking of the endgame, Keats has also booked an exhibition space for 3018—talk about planning ahead!


Informative plaques are set up by each Millennium Camera to explain Tahoe Timescape. The cameras are visible at the following locations: Heavenly Mountain Resort (South Lake Tahoe, NV/CA), Eagle Rock (Homewood, CA), Lake Tahoe Dam (Tahoe City, CA), and Sand Habor, NV.



These landscape and pinhole photos around Lake Tahoe demonstrate how the environment looks today and the type of photo compositions we may expect from the Millennium Camera.

Tahoe Timelapse Project by Jonathon Keats

View from Eagle Rock

Tahoe Timelapse Project by Jonathon Keats

View of Sand Harbor

Tahoe Timelapse Project by Jonathon Keats

Pinhole view of Sand Harbor

Tahoe Timelapse Project by Jonathon Keats

View of the Tahoe Dam

Tahoe Timelapse Project by Jonathon Keats

Pinhole view of the Tahoe Dam

Jonathon Keats: Twitter

All photos by Ryland West, courtesy of Tahoe Public Art. My Modern Met granted permission to use photos by Jonathon Keats.

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