Tomorrow, March 10th, my dad and I will present the first portion of the proceeds which we have collected to date through the Point Sublime project.
With the help of Melissa, the "patient navigator" at the Ironwood Cancer and Research Center, we have decided to give the money to the American Cancer Society Cancer Resource Center at the Ironwood Center (Ironwood CRC) and the local American Cancer Society's "Road to Recovery" program. The Road to Recovery program will help patients get to and from their cancer appointments.
For a book about a scary, yet rewarding road-trip, it seems fitting to help people get to where they need to be.
The books and prints are still available, and this is just the first of several installments which will follow as the checks are rolling in, so please don't think it is too late. We will keep donating the money for each one sold.
Point Sublime.
In the summer of 1984 my father drove his Ford F250 alone into Point Sublime, a remote overlook at the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. His only objective was to photograph a sunset. A long, dangerous trip by any standard, these were the days before cell-phones and GPS and even he now admits it was fool-hardy. These photographs became stock-imagery for the river-rafting slide shows we produced over 30 years in the Grand Canyon. On a visit to Arizona last summer I began sorting through thousands of slides, deciding what to scan, what to archive and what to throw out. When I came upon a sheet titled “Sublime”, it wasn’t the sunsets that interested me, but the photographs he never showed me; his truck stuck in the mud, the lonely road, a spooked deer in the woods. I know he will say different, but if you have met my father, you will agree that below his rough outer-surface is a romantic renaissance man. An otherwise practical man, he was inspired to narrate his journey to watch the sun go down. I smile to think of him out there, cursing to no end, trudging away from his truck to compose that picture of his truck in the mud, capturing the spirit of the whole mess. The sunset simply being the excuse to go.
Andrew Phelps, 2011.
Lovely thought Andrew.....Beautiful imagery execution and presentation. Brings back wonderful memories of the past and makes you think about how sometimes you are not able to see what is right in front of your eyes.....
ReplyDeleteThis is an inspiring project Andrew. I love the layout, every page looks like we're looking through a window.
ReplyDeleteSuper bro!
ReplyDelete