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The Meadow Fire burns behind Half Dome.
The Meadow Fire burns behind Half Dome.
Indefinitely Wild

Terra Flamma: The Destructive Beauty of Wildfire

One photographer's attempt to find art in fire, even as climate change makes conditions more deadly

Published: 
The Meadow Fire burns behind Half Dome in Yosemite National Park shortly before dawn in September, 2014.

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Wildfires are lots of things. They鈥檙e a natural part of the western ecosystem. They鈥檙e destructive and deadly. They鈥檙e hugely expensive to fight. And they鈥檙e getting worse. But wildfires are also something else. Wildfires are beautiful.

That鈥檚 the subject of , an art project and book created by , a freelance Forest Service fire photographer. He documented 45 major fires over five fire seasons, shooting them at night as their flames glowed against the night sky.

Palley works as a freelance fire photographer for the Forest Service, meaning he needs to have much of the same training and gear as the firefighters.
Palley works as a freelance fire photographer for the Forest Service, meaning he needs to have much of the same training and gear as the firefighters. (Stuart Palley)

Palley was first struck by the beauty of wildfire while interning at the Orange County Register in 2012. Tasked with shooting a local brush fire, he witnessed first responders trying to save a burning house. 鈥淭hey were pulling what they could out of the garage鈥攖ools, family photos, a kid鈥檚 electric Barbie car鈥攚hile a tanker dropped retardant on the burning hillside behind the house,鈥 Palley recalls. 鈥淚 was struck by the juxtaposition between the scale of human life and the force of nature that is fire.鈥

But it wasn鈥檛 until 2013, while shooting the Powerhouse Fire in Los Angeles County, that Palley found a way to translate the balance between beauty and destruction into art. 鈥淚 was there one night, and I鈥檝e always enjoyed shooting stars, so I busted out my camera and made a few long exposures,鈥 he says. The next day, he included those shots when he filed his photos with press agency. They loved them and asked for more. 鈥淪o I started hanging around fires after dark,鈥 Palley says. The photos that resulted over the next five years became Terra Flamma.

The El Portal Fire.
The El Portal Fire. (Stuart Palley)

鈥淲hen I started the project, I assumed fires would get worse for a few years, then the rain would return and they鈥檇 get better,鈥 Palley says. California was in the middle of a drought, which at the time was credited for worsening wildfires. If that had been the end of the story, Terra Flamma would have succeeded in documenting a particularly challenging period in the state鈥檚 history. Instead, as he was called to photograph more and more damaging fires, Palley came to the conclusion that something much bigger than a multiyear drought was happening.

鈥淭here are no signs that fire conditions are improving,鈥 the photographer says. 鈥淎ll signs point toward fires becoming larger, more destructive, and the fire season going to year-round. In the past 12 months, we鈥檝e had the largest wildfire in modern California history鈥攖he Thomas Fire鈥攖hen seven months later, it was eclipsed by the Ranch Fire in Northern California. The two biggest fires in state history in one year is a pretty big deal. If you look at the statistics of acres burned, average high temperatures, property destroyed, and death, it鈥檚 all going up. The reality is that human-caused climate change is most certainly a contributing factor.鈥

The Railroad Fire.
The Railroad Fire. (Stuart Palley)

Palley鈥檚 on-the-ground conclusion is backed by scientific research, which has determined that wildfires will increase exponentially as the earth continues to warm. How bad can it get? Palley points to this summer鈥檚 destructive Carr Fire near Redding, California, as an example. 鈥淎 perfect blend of fuels, heat, and wind that measured in as an F3, with winds over 158 miles per hour. We couldn鈥檛 fight it. All we could do was get out of the way. It was pretty scary to watch,鈥 Palley says.

He鈥檚 also quick to point out that the warming climate isn鈥檛 solely to blame. Construction practices over the past few decades are a major contributor to putting lives and property at risk from fire. Since 1990, built in western states have been built in fire-prone areas. 鈥淓specially in California, we鈥檙e stuck between a rock and a hard place,鈥 Palley explains. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got a pretty serious housing shortage, so we need to expand, but if we do that outward instead of upward, we鈥檙e putting people at risk. We鈥檙e building homes in an ecosystem that is naturally replenished by fire.鈥 People鈥檚 desire to live close to nature is also putting them close to fire.

The Blue Cut Fire.
The Blue Cut Fire. (Stuart Palley)

Palley estimates that over聽the past five years, he鈥檚 probably watched 鈥渁 few hundred鈥 homes burn down while he created the art in Terra Flamma. How does he reconcile his ability to find beauty in fire with the very real toll those fires have on human lives? 鈥淚 really want to put fires in context as more than just pretty pictures of nature doing something,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 want to create a conversation about them.鈥

Accompanying the photos, Palley tells a story of what it was like to experience each of the 45 fires, while also tackling the issue of climate change head-on. His conclusion? 鈥淔ires are not going to stop getting worse until we reduce our carbon emissions.鈥

The Rim Fire.
The Rim Fire. (Stuart Palley)

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