Steven Bundy is a fine art photographer whose central subject matter focuses on Landscape and Southwest Americana in and around the western United States. Steven attempts to blend his 36-year background in civil engineering and its associated "Left-Brain" analytical thinking with his 17 years of Fine Art Photography experience and its "Right-Brain" creativity into all of his photographic images. H
is civil engineering background has influenced his sense of composition as he finds his eye naturally drawn to the geometric designs that exist in nature and the manmade forms all around us. Located in Taos, New Mexico, Steven uses this central location to travel and discover the back roads of the southwest to capture and preserve the vast landscapes, crumbling buildings, rusting forgotten cars and evidence of diverse cultures that he finds along the way - giving them new recognition and preserving them as they erode - before they melt back into the earth. Essentially self-taught, Steven has had opportunities to study under and work alongside such well known photographers as California wildlife photographer Roy Toft, New Mexico landscape photographer Craig Varjabedian, and New Mexico wildlife and landscape photographer Geraint Smith. In recent years Steven has been invited to give lectures to photography clubs, for example, the North County Photographic Society in Encinitas, California and the San Diego Sierra Photography Club of California. From 2008 through 2012 Steven was part owner and worked as an instructor at the Santa Fe, New Mexico based photography school Eloquent Light Photography Workshops alongside Mr. In 2012 Steven decided it was time to venture out on his own and now operates Steven Bundy Photography in Taos, New Mexico. Published images are included in New Mexico Magazine, Colorado Life Magazine, Cowboys and Indians Magazine, Farmington New Mexico Visitor Guide, Taos Ski Valley Visitor Guide, Angel Fire New Mexico Visitor Guide, Taos News Visitor Guide, to name a few. His images are included in the permanent collections of the State of New Mexico Art in Public Places, The Gus Foster Collection of Taos New Mexico, together with works exhibited nationally and numerous private collections.