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Printed on 325 gr/m² fine art baryta paper. 

Chimpanzees may get much less hype than the endangered mountain gorillas, but tracking our closest relative through the African jungle is one of the world's most thrilling wildlife encounters. One of the best places to do so is Kibale Forest National Park in Uganda. With chances of seeing them of probably 99%, it is the prime spot to have an encounter. However, its forests are also crowded. With over 50 people send off into the woods each morning at 8 AM there’s nothing transcending there. Let’s say any of those 50 tourists encounter a chimpansee and take a picture. That’s 350 images a week, or over 18 thousand a year. It’s hackneyed and nowhere near outstanding imagery…

When doing my research for this shoot I didn’t find any fine art images of chimpansees. Sure, there’re some clean National Geographic, journalistic images which show a close up encounter of a chimp posing. But a really intimate image of these primates seemed only preserved for the cover of BBC’s “Dynasties”… The goal was to capture that raw, human like emotion we can relate to so much. And chances are you’re not going to find it within well known locations.

In the search for more remote locations I came at a desolated valley within Queen Elizabeth N.P. Although this is one of Uganda’s most known wildlife parks there’s just one chimp family living remotely in the Kyambura Gorge. This gorge is actually drained by River Kayambura and about 100 meters deep. The gorge is another world on its own. While the savannah above has a reasonable amount of light, the tree canopy brings a somewhat mystic feel to the place.

When we actually heard the chimps they were on the other side of the crocodile inhabited river. While walking towards our position we made a judgement call. Using a fallen log as an overpass we crossed the river and hoped we could intercept them. And it worked out. While laying on the ground, the alpha male walked within one feet besides me. The pursuit of this image was relentless and I think we got it. It shows the humanlike charistics from these primates, like we know from Caesar’s Planet of the Apes and the emotion in his eyes is evidently raw.

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Relentless (unframed) - Limited Edition 2 of 25 Photograph

Jochen van Dijk

Netherlands

Photography, Paper on Paper

Size: 29.5 W x 19.7 H x 0.1 D in

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ABOUT THE ARTWORK

Printed on 325 gr/m² fine art baryta paper. Chimpanzees may get much less hype than the endangered mountain gorillas, but tracking our closest relative through the African jungle is one of the world's most thrilling wildlife encounters. One of the best places to do so is Kibale Forest National Park in Uganda. With chances of seeing them of probably 99%, it is the prime spot to have an encounter. However, its forests are also crowded. With over 50 people send off into the woods each morning at 8 AM there’s nothing transcending there. Let’s say any of those 50 tourists encounter a chimpansee and take a picture. That’s 350 images a week, or over 18 thousand a year. It’s hackneyed and nowhere near outstanding imagery… When doing my research for this shoot I didn’t find any fine art images of chimpansees. Sure, there’re some clean National Geographic, journalistic images which show a close up encounter of a chimp posing. But a really intimate image of these primates seemed only preserved for the cover of BBC’s “Dynasties”… The goal was to capture that raw, human like emotion we can relate to so much. And chances are you’re not going to find it within well known locations. In the search for more remote locations I came at a desolated valley within Queen Elizabeth N.P. Although this is one of Uganda’s most known wildlife parks there’s just one chimp family living remotely in the Kyambura Gorge. This gorge is actually drained by River Kayambura and about 100 meters deep. The gorge is another world on its own. While the savannah above has a reasonable amount of light, the tree canopy brings a somewhat mystic feel to the place. When we actually heard the chimps they were on the other side of the crocodile inhabited river. While walking towards our position we made a judgement call. Using a fallen log as an overpass we crossed the river and hoped we could intercept them. And it worked out. While laying on the ground, the alpha male walked within one feet besides me. The pursuit of this image was relentless and I think we got it. It shows the humanlike charistics from these primates, like we know from Caesar’s Planet of the Apes and the emotion in his eyes is evidently raw.

DETAILS AND DIMENSIONS
Photography:

Paper on Paper

Artist Produced Limited Edition of:

25

Size:

29.5 W x 19.7 H x 0.1 D in

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Delivery Time:

Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

Jochen van Dijk is a Dutch-based wildlife and landscape photographer. He strives to capture the urban experience of cities, animal encounters and the emotional connection with different cultures in images which translate these emotions to a clear visual voice. The goal is to bring a observable connecting message that can move people in any way possible. This is his motivation to push harder and harder every time he presses that shutter. The problem in this modern world is there’s a huge amount of visual content. Maybe even too much… By the internet it’s simple to share all of these experiences with so many people worldwide. Though good pictures make up for likes on Facebook, Instagram or pretty iPhone wallpapers, in the end it’s about one simple critique: if I personally have only one wall to decorate… would I put this up? Jochen fiercely believes that the answer to this question is trivial. He favors a fine-art style, choosing to appeal to buyers of framed photography, because a well executed picture framed and hanging on a wall or printed in a book has more impact than on a webpage. In his opinion, print is the ultimate destination for any image. Even in this digital world we live in.

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