Stones of the Sur: Poetry by Robinson Jeffers, Photographs by Morley Baer
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Average customer review:Product Description
Before he died in 1995, Baer was planning a volume that would bring together a group of his landscape photographs of the Big Sur area with a selection of poems that expressed Jeffers’s mystical experience of stone. Jeffers believed that stone is alive, perhaps even conscious in some way. Baer wanted to create a visual and literary meditation on the life-experience of stone. James Karman was invited by Baer to serve as his collaborator, and has brought the project to completion—more than 50 of Baer’s photographs paired with poems by Jeffers (some complete, others excerpted).
Stones of the Sur is in five parts, each of which takes its title from a poem. Part I, “Tor House,” contains photographs and poems about Jeffers’s home, ever the locus of his inspiration. Part II, “Continent’s End,” begins with a panoramic view of the coastline and is followed by visual and textual images that become progressively narrower in scope as Baer and Jeffers focus on the mountains, cliffs, beaches, boulders, rocks, and pebbles of the Big Sur.
The inward progression continues in Part III, “Oh Lovely Rock,” where Baer trains his lens on close surfaces—revealing his sensibilities at their most abstract. From the middle of Part III on, the spiral is reversed and the view begins to open. Part IV, “Credo,” expands outwardly from the pebbles and rocks of the Big Sur back to the beaches, cliffs, and mountains. Part V, “The Old Stone-Mason,” concludes the book with a return to Tor House.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #998140 in Books
- Published on: 2002-06-01
- Released on: 2001-06-26
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 176 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
From the Inside Flap
Before he died in 1995, Baer was planning a volume that would bring together a group of his landscape photographs of the Big Sur area with a selection of poems that expressed Jeffers’s mystical experience of stone. Jeffers believed that stone is alive, perhaps even conscious in some way. Baer wanted to create a visual and literary meditation on the life-experience of stone. James Karman was invited by Baer to serve as his collaborator, and has brought the project to completion—more than 50 of Baer’s photographs paired with poems by Jeffers (some complete, others excerpted).
Stones of the Sur is in five parts, each of which takes its title from a poem. Part I, “Tor House,” contains photographs and poems about Jeffers’s home, ever the locus of his inspiration. Part II, “Continent’s End,” begins with a panoramic view of the coastline and is followed by visual and textual images that become progressively narrower in scope as Baer and Jeffers focus on the mountains, cliffs, beaches, boulders, rocks, and pebbles of the Big Sur.
The inward progression continues in Part III, “Oh Lovely Rock,” where Baer trains his lens on close surfaces—revealing his sensibilities at their most abstract. From the middle of Part III on, the spiral is reversed and the view begins to open. Part IV, “Credo,” expands outwardly from the pebbles and rocks of the Big Sur back to the beaches, cliffs, and mountains. Part V, “The Old Stone-Mason,” concludes the book with a return to Tor House.
From the Back Cover
"A master in his field. . . . [Baer's work] has the aura of excellence and his craft is above reproach."—Ansel Adams on Morley Baer
Customer Reviews
Beauty in Prose and Imagery
This book is the consummate bonding of two of California's great artists. The words of Jeffers and the photographs of Baer blend to form a book of unparralled beauty...this book gives the Big Sur in California a grace and elegance beyond description..Mr. Baer's photographs are infused with a quiet intensity....one can spend hours enjoying his vision...adding the words of Robinson Jeffers is pure brilliance; particularly since these two men were part of what defined the West Coast art movement in the 50's. Strongly recommend this book to anyone who loves the Big Sur, brilliant b&w photography and the poetry and prose of Jeffers.



