National Geographic Live! Life: The Unfolding Story with Frans Lanting, photographer

National Geographic Live! Life: The Unfolding Story with Frans Lanting, photographer

Part of the National Geographic Live! speaker series

Frans Lanting has been hailed as one of the great photographers of our time. Lanting's work is commissioned frequently by National Geographic, where he served as a Photographer-in-Residence. His assignments have ranged from a first look at the fabled bonobos of the Congo to a unique circumnavigation by sailboat of South Georgia Island in the subantarctic.

Images from his year-long odyssey to assess global biodiversity at the turn of the millennium filled an issue of National Geographic.  Lanting’s work for National Geographic also includes profiles of ecological hot spots, a series of photo essays on American landscapes, stories about Hawaii's volcanoes, Zambia's wildlife, a global survey of albatrosses, and a feature on groundbreaking research with chimpanzees in Senegal that is shedding new light on human evolution. His story about Namibia's new super park featured an image, "Ghost Trees, Namibia," that became an internet sensation when it was published in the June 2011 issue of National Geographic.

Funded in part by The Joy McCann Foundation
 

Feb. 21 Ferguson Hall
sponsor

We Recommend

National Geographic Live! Ocean Soul with Brian Skerry, underwater photographer National Geographic Live! Beyond the Invisible: Secrets of the Blue Holes with Kenny Broad, cave diver/environmental anthropologist National Geographic Live! Connect with Anybody, Anywhere with Annie Griffiths, photographer


  •   
      

Show Dates & Times

Feb. 21

Tues. 7 p.m.

Pricing

Regularly priced tickets start at $19.50.

Groups save on the service fee – just $1.50 per ticket! Groups of 12 or more receive a 15% discount off the regular ticket price.

Educator's discount: 50% off. Limit 2 tickets. Price level 3 only. Other restrictions apply.

There is a maximum ticket allotment of eight tickets per account/household/business for paid, ticketed events. (For some shows, it may be less.) Applicable service charges added at point of purchase. There is no maximum for free, non-ticketed events.

For ticket purchases via the phone or ticket office, service charges are waived for current annual Straz members at the $400 level and higher, although special handling fees may apply to some shows. Service charges for online transactions apply to all members. 

Pursuant to s.817.36, Florida Statutes, no Straz Center ticket may be offered or resold for more than $1 over the face value of the ticket.

About the Show

Using a naturalist’s knowledge and an artist’s sensitive eye for rhythm, color and design, Lanting has, for some 20 years, created images of wildlife that transcend the boundaries of traditional wildlife photography.

Born in the Netherlands in 1951, Lanting’s love of nature began at a very young age: “I grew up in a small village which eventually was transformed into the center of a big petrochemical, industrial area in Holland. I’ve seen first hand how societies overwhelm organic landscapes.”

Trained as an economist, Lanting came to the United States to study environmental planning. “I thought that I could use the discipline of economics to try and put a face and a value onto natural processes,” he explains. “But I realized I was on my way to becoming a bureaucrat and to being isolated from the natural world.”

When Lanting moved to California in 1978, he was “promptly seduced” by the artistic climate of the region and took up photography as a new medium of expression -- and it became his means of drawing world attention not only to wildlife, but to their environments, as well.

One of the aspects of Lanting’s work that separates him from so many other wildlife photographers is his approach to his subjects: rather than stalking surreptitiously by blind or vehicle (though he also does both), Lanting spends a great deal of time winning the confidence and trust of his subjects. In fact, he often photographs while sitting in the open, mere feet from his subjects, using wild-angle lenses. Perhaps Lanting’s greatest success, though, rises from his simple, unrelenting passion for all wild creatures. “I become a different person when I connect with animals,” he says.

In his 20-year career, Frans Lanting has won numerous honors, including being named BBC “Wildlife Photographer of the Year” and his work has been shown in galleries in New York, Tokyo, Paris, Milan, Madrid and Amsterdam. He has also created some of the most profoundly beautiful nature books ever published, including his most recent book "Eye to Eye: Intimate Encounters With The Animal World."

Run-time: