Rhythms of Creation:
A Family's Impressions of Indigenous Peoples of the World

 

Home
biography
writings
videos



 

Connie Baxter Marlow

Connie became a landscape photographer in the 60's and 70's in the West Coast tradition and was assistant at several Ansel Adams workshops. She published a book of photographs on Mt. Katahdin and Baxter State Park, Maine in 1972 which was republished in the summer of 1999 with the blessings of the Wabanaki people, for whom Katahdin is a sacred mountain.

She spent fifteen years in close association, "as family" with various tribes of the United States and Mexico throughout the '90's to 2006. In 2004 she was introduced to the Bushmen of the Kalahari by her now-husband Andrew and had never been so "loved on" as she was by them. Her photographs in this exhibit take a "family album" approach to sharing the way of life she experienced to show that indeed, we are One.

Her landscape photography has been shown at Bowdoin College, University of Maine, The Gargoyle Gallery, Aspen, CO, Art Center College of Design, included in an exhibit of 20th Century American Photography in Kansas City, Missouri in 1974 and has been most recently shown in Brunswick, Maine and Cove Street Arts in Portland, Maine.

The "Rhythms of Creation" exhibit has toured New England, the US and Mexico since 1999.

To learn more about Connie and her work in the world go to: https://Linktr.ee/ConnieBaxterMarlow

 

 

Connie Baxter Marlow
cbm@theamericanevolution.com