Exclusive Edition - The Ultimate Field Guide to Photography: Buy Now!
Visit our Online Shops

Sign up for free

Newsletters

Once a month
get new photos
and expert tips.

Photographer: Barry Tessman

Barry Tessman was an action/adventure photographer whose passion for remote cultures and harsh climates took him to five continents on a variety of extreme adventures.

Tessman was an avid kayaker, climber, and mountain biker, but he was perhaps best known for having rafted or kayaked many of the world's toughest—and most remote—rivers, including China's Yangtze, Costa Rica's Pacuare, the Apurímac in Peru, the Katun'  in Russia, and several first descents in Siberia, Asia, and northern Canada.

A Class V river guide, backcountry ski patrolman, and paramedic, Tessman's biggest personal adventures included spending two years photographing in communist Siberia, wintering with the nomadic Khanty culture, and being one of the first Americans to explore the Kuril Islands. Other independent photo expeditions included crossing the Bolivian Altiplano, Tibet, India, and Pakistan.

Tessman was also a veteran of numerous other expeditions, treks, and photographic assignments all over the globe. His photographs were regularly featured in a variety of magazines, newspapers, books, and catalogs, including National Geographic Adventure, National Geographic Traveler, Newsweek, Sports Illustrated, Sports Afield, the New York Times, Esquire, Outside, Men's Journal, River, Climbing, Paddler, and many others.

Photographs of Tessman's sea kayaking expedition to the Island of the Four Mountains in the heart of the Aleutians accompanied the November 1999 issue of National Geographic Adventure and are featured in a book, Aleutian Adventures: Kayaking in the Birthplace of the Winds, published by National Geographic Books in 2001.

Barry Tessman died on Lake Isabella, California, on January 16, 2001.

www.barrytessman.com

Related Features

Photo: Photographer washing film in Gulf of Alaska

Photo Gallery: National Geographic Milestones

Discover the role National Geographic has played in the development of photography, from its early explorers and the first underwater shots to the images of today.

Photo: View of courtyards

Milestones in Photography

Explore major milestones in the history of photography from the first photograph ever captured to today’s most iconic images, and learn more about this thriving art.

Photographers A-Z

Special Advertising Section

Photo: Horses and old barn

Enter Sweepstakes

Take a photographic journey through Montana and enter for a chance to win a trip for two!

Photo: Glass of water

Take Quiz

Eighteen percent of the world's population can't get safe drinking water. Test your water knowledge.

Photo Tip of the Week

Long Exposures

When making long exposures, use a remote release to avoid camera movement. If you don't have a remote release, use the camera's self-timer.

More Photo Tips

Photography Guides

Photo: Ultimate Field Guide book cover

Guides by National Geographic photographers.

Your Opinion Matters

Photo: Hippopotamus with mouth open

Got some ideas about our Web site? Join Base Camp today and tell us what you think.