Thursday, April 22, 2021 GO! magazine — A&E in Northeast Oregon ‘Fire Stories’: Josephy Center/Contributed Photo JOHN F. MARSHALL holds a B.S. in fi shery science from Oregon State University and an M.S. in wildlife resources from the University of Idaho. For the last 25 years, he has worked with Dr. Paul Hessburg of the Pacifi c Northwest Research Station of the U.S. Forest Service to document changes in the role of fi re in the modern era . JOSEPH — “Fire Stories” — a historic and contemporary explo- ration of wildfi re in Northwest landscapes — opens April 23 at the Josephy Center for Arts and Culture in Joseph. There will be a limited open- ing at 7 p.m. Friday, fi rst-come, fi rst-served, as the Josephy Center is currently authorized for only 31 visitors. There will be unlimited ac- cess via Zoom. Look for the link at www.josephy.org or call the center at 541-432-0505 for instructions. The exhibit showcases photos Josephy Center/Contibuted Photo 3 NEW PERSPECTIVES from old photographs taken from fi re lookout towers with Osborne panoramic cameras nearly 90 years ago paired with modern replications from pho- tographer and naturalist John F. Marshall. The paired images provide a unique perspective — the contrasts showing how fi re and fi re suppression have changed the landscapes of the Wallowa and Blue mountains. In the 1930s, with a camera designed by U.S. Forest Service worker William Bushnell “Bush” Osborne and built by Leupold- Volpel & Co. in Portland, foresters took pictures from fi re lookout towers across the Northwest. Each photo covered 120 degrees, so three photos covered the entire region surveyed from each tower, and, matched with the “Osborne Firefi nder,” allowed lookout guards to pinpoint the fi res and communi- cate up the line. For the past several years, Mar- shall has trekked the Wallowa and Blue mountains to fi nd these Os- borne photo locations — climbing the towers when still there, or in some other way fi nding a vantage point to match the 1930s viewsheds — and take pictures from the same spots today. The relationship between humans and fi re is tangled with how we live on the land and use its resources. American Indians long learned to live with fi re and made it useful. European settlement The Josephy Center’s “Fire Stories” exhibit features historical photographs taken with a unique camera called the “Osborne Photo Recording Transit.” The special cameras were used by the U.S. Forest Service in the 1930s to capture 120-degree large-format panoramic images from hundreds of fi re lookout towers and other sites throughout Oregon and Washington. The Osborne panoramic camera had a moving lens in front of a stationary 6” x 13” negative. The photographer would wind it up to do the picture taking. Fewer than 10 of the cameras were built. brought a different sensibility and the tools and organization to con- trol fi re — but it wasn’t understood then how fi re is essential to the function of nature, and attempting to eliminate fi re has only increased its destructive power. How does nature live with fi re, and how can we? According to the Josephy Center’s description of the exhibit, these are questions that cannot be ignored in this unprec- edented time. This exhibit will pro- vide some answers and stimulate more thought and discussion. The then-and-now photos illus- trate the positive roles of historical wildfi res and document changes in the role of fi re in the modern era. Works of art on their own, the “Fire Stories” photographs show how art, history and science can work together to teach us about Pacifi c Northwest forests. The exhibit will be up until June 15. Gallery hours at the Josephy Center, 403 N. Main St., Joseph, are noon to 5 p.m. on weekdays and noon to 4 p.m. on Saturdays. Complementary programs are planned for May. The Josephy Book Group will meet via Zoom May 4 to discuss “Fire in Paradise: An Amer- ican Tragedy.” All are welcome. A special virtual “Fire in the West” discussion May 20 will fea- Josephy Center/Contributed Image The top photo, from the U.S. Forest Service in 1936, and the bottom one, from John F. Marshall in 2018, view the Wallowa Mountains in the Eagle Cap Wilderness and show the changes wildfi re has made on the landscape. fi res have become annual catas- trophes across the West and what we can do about them. It aired on Oregon Public Broadcasting in February. Additionally, one of a very few Osborne cameras will be on exhibit at the Josephy Center, and a book with many of the photos and John Marshall’s comments is available for sale at the center and at The Bookloft, 107 E. Main St., Enter- prise (www.bookloftoregon.net). The Josephy Center presents the “Fire Stories” exhibit in partner- ship with Wallowa Resources (www.wallowaresources.org). ture Stephen J. Pyne, an emeritus professor at Arizona State Univer- sity specializing in the history of fi re. Pyre is the author of “Fire in America” and “Between Two Fires,” considered seminal texts on fi re. The free Zoom event will run from 2-4 p.m. and is open to all. The link will be posted on the Josephy Center’s website. “The West Is Burning,” a docu- mentary produced and fi lmed by Cody Sheehy, a Wallowa County native, will be presented via streaming at the center at 7 p.m. May 27. Sheehy will introduce the fi lm, which examines why mega- FREE eBooks and audiobooks Thousands of titles AVAILABLE DAILY Noon to midnight Unlimited # of sessions at NO CHARGE! It’s PRE-PAID with your taxes. Access with your Baker County Library Card from www.bakerlib.org/kids-teens Explore the ONLINE LIBRARY at www.bakerlib.org 541.523.6419 info@bakerlib.org