New England

New England Quarry Photos | Featured Photographer Steven Keirstead

A collection of images celebrating the unique beauty of the New England quarry by featured photographer Steven Keirstead.

Coffee By Design | Portland, Maine

Photo Credit : Katherine Keenan
Wetmore & Morse Quarry, South Barre, Vermont, MMXIV
Wetmore & Morse Quarry, South Barre, Vermont, 2014
Photo Credit : Steven Keirstead

DESCRIBE YOUR CONNECTION TO NEW ENGLAND.

I was born overseas, in Vietnam, but my father grew up on a potato farm in Aroostook County, Maine. When I was little, we used to travel from North Carolina to visit relatives in coastal Maine. After college in Texas, I moved to Boston and met my future husband, Lansing Wagner, at Harvard University, where we both work in life sciences education, supporting labs for undergraduates. Lansing is from Winterport, Maine, and we often vacationed at the Wagner family’s rustic summer house on Herrick Bay in Brooklin. We decided to have our own summer/retirement house built in nearby Blue Hill. After I found out there were granite quarries in Blue Hill, I began to photographically explore quarries in Maine and Massachusetts. Eventually I decided to travel to all six New England states to photograph quarries in each of them, which became my “Quarries of New England” portfolio.

DESCRIBE YOUR EQUIPMENT.

For several years I was shooting mostly 645 medium-format color film and printing my own negatives at the New England School of Photography and the Massachusetts College of Art. But in 2012 both schools closed their color darkrooms. So the only way to keep printing my own color images was to switch to digital. Now I use a Nikon D800E DSLR and a Leica M-P digital rangefinder camera. I mostly use Zeiss lenses for both systems, but sometimes I use some of the newer Nikkor and Leica lenses. I prefer single-focal-length lenses: 28mm and 35mm wide angles, mostly, but sometimes 85mm or 135mm telephotos. Image quality is quite important to me when I am shooting landscape work, so I often use either a monopod or a tripod to lend stability to the camera. I’m usually shooting three images side by side, intending to print them together as triptychs, and using a camera support helps me to compose and to align elements from one frame to the next. In post-exposure, I process raw files in Adobe Lightroom CC, then export images to Photoshop CC, putting the individual photos into a template with a black frame lines for printing or presentation. This format evolved from my film work, when I used to print two 645 negatives together on one sheet of paper in the darkroom, including the edges of the negatives, which became black outlines in printing. I’m now printing using Epson archival inkjet printers on Canson Photosatin RC paper. This combination makes better prints than what I used to be able to achieve in the darkroom, because I can control a lot more variables to achieve the realistic color that I like. Printing on archival paper is important to me because the image on paper is likely to last longer than the digital source files, which will eventually become corrupted and unusable. I’m striving for a picture that is partially documentary, partially lyrical and artistic, and above all conveys a detailed sense of place and space to the viewer.

WHAT INSPIRES YOU?

I adore Japanese art, particularly from the Meiji period (1868–1912); that art was made after Japan reopened to contact with Europe and the U.S. and began to combine visual ideas from Eastern and Western traditions. In photography, I am awed by nature — both majestic forests and barren wastes. My real interest lies in how humans interact with nature, for better or for worse. Our activities have been profoundly influencing the landscape for thousands of years. As agriculture and the industrial revolution gave us more control over local environments, our alterations to the land have often been exploitative and destructive. But when an industrial site like a rock quarry is abandoned by people, nature begins to return. The land will never be the same as it was before, but unless the land is polluted by toxic waste, life finds a way to persevere and reclaim the place. These altered landscapes have their own peculiar beauty, which speaks to me of the resilience of nature. To see more of Steven Keirstead’s work or to learn how to purchase prints, go to fas.harvard.edu/~keirst.

NEW ENGLAND QUARRY PHOTOS | FEATURED PHOTOGRAPHER STEPHEN KEIRSTEAD

Wetmore & Morse Quarry, South Barre, Vermont, MMXIV
Wetmore & Morse Quarry, South Barre, Vermont, 2014
Photo Credit : Steven Keirstead
Fitzwilliam Webb Quarry, Fitzwilliam, New Hampshire, MMXIV
Fitzwilliam Webb Quarry, Fitzwilliam, New Hampshire, 2014
Photo Credit : Steven Keirstead
Specialty Minerals Limestone Quarry, Canaan, Connecticut, MMXVI
Specialty Minerals Limestone Quarry, Canaan, Connecticut, 2016
Photo Credit : Steven Keirstead
Hudson & Chester Quarry, Becket, Massachusetts, MMXVI
Hudson & Chester Quarry, Becket, Massachusetts, 2016
Photo Credit : Steven Keirstead
Granite Railroad, Reinhart, and Swingle Quarries, Quincy, Massachusetts, MMXVI
Granite Railroad, Reinhart, and Swingle Quarries, Quincy, Massachusetts, 2016
Photo Credit : Steven Keirstead
High Isle Quarry, Muscle Ridge Islands, Maine, MMXIV
High Isle Quarry, Muscle Ridge Islands, Maine, 2015
Photo Credit : Steven Keirstead
Flat Ledge Quarry, Rockport, Massachusetts, MMXV
Flat Ledge Quarry, Rockport, Massachusetts, 2015
Photo Credit : Steven Keirstead
Settlement Quarry, Stonington, Maine, MMXIV
Settlement Quarry, Stonington, Maine, 2014
Photo Credit : Steven Keirstead
Blood Ledge Quarry, Gloucester, Massachusetts, MMXIV
Blood Ledge Quarry, Gloucester, Massachusetts, 2015
Photo Credit : Steven Keirstead
Chase Quarry, Blue Hill, Maine, MMXV
Chase Quarry, Blue Hill, Maine, 2015
Photo Credit : Steven Keirstead
Chase Quarry, Blue Hill, Maine, MMXIII
Chase Quarry, Blue Hill, Maine, 2013
Photo Credit : Steven Keirstead
Lichens, Chase Quarry, Blue Hill, Maine, MMXIV
Lichens, Chase Quarry, Blue Hill, Maine, 2014
Photo Credit : Steven Keirstead
Blood Ledge Quarry, Gloucester, Massachusetts, MMXVI
Blood Ledge Quarry, Gloucester, Massachusetts, 2016
Photo Credit : Steven Keirstead
Flat Ledge Quarry, Rockport, Massachusetts, MMXV
Flat Ledge Quarry, Rockport, Massachusetts, 2015
Photo Credit : Steven Keirstead

SEE MORE: Coastal New England | Featured Photographer Ray Larose Life at Sea | Photographer & Lobsterman Joel Woods Scenes from Maine | Photographer Greta Rybus

Heather Marcus

More by Heather Marcus

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  1. A wonderful collection, one that makes me want to visit those quarries. And I enjoyed the technical comments from the photographer.

  2. You should visit the J.K. Freedley Marble Quarry, circa 1836, in West Stockbridge, Massachusetts. Artifacts, Marble cliffs, historical. Go to Massachusetts Histoical Society, to find out more. October 7th and 8th event scheduled for Archaeology Month.