Subscribe Now! National Geographic Magazine $15
Visit our Online Shops

Sign up for free

Newsletters

Once a month
get new photos
and expert tips.

Photographer: Jack Dykinga

Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Jack Dykinga blends large-format, landscape photography with documentary photojournalism. He is a regular contributor to Arizona Highways and National Geographic. His book Jack Dykinga's Arizona is a compilation of his best Arizona images along with accounts of his personal wilderness experiences.

Photo: Photographer Jack Dykinga
Photograph by Patricio Robles Gil

Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Jack Dykinga blends large-format, landscape photography with documentary photojournalism. He is a regular contributor to Arizona Highways and National Geographic. His book Jack Dykinga's Arizona is a compilation of his best Arizona images along with accounts of his personal wilderness experiences.

Dykinga's other books include Frog Mountain Blues, The Secret Forest, The Sierra Pinacate, The Sonoran Desert, Stone Canyons of the Colorado Plateau, and Desert: The Mojave and Death Valley. He also wrote and photographed Large Format Nature Photography, a how-to guide to color landscape photography, and collaborated with Mexico's Agrupación Sierra Madre to help produce their book on the Mexican state of Tamaulipas.

Directing his focus to the Texas-Mexico border, Dykinga highlighted the biological richness and diversity of the protected areas along the Rio Grande River corridor in the February 2007 issue of National Geographic. Two months later, Dykinga and four other photographers—Thomas Mangelsen (United States), Patricio Robles Gil (Mexico), Fulvio Eccardi (Italy and Mexico), and Florien Schultz (Germany)—formed the first ever Rapid Assessment Visual Expedition (RAVE) for the International League of Conservation Photographers. They documented the El Triunfo cloud forest in Chiapas, Mexico, to draw attention to its threatened habitat.

Currently, Dykinga serves on the board of the Sonoran National Park Project in an effort to create a new binational park on the border of Arizona and Sonora, Mexico.

He and his wife, Margaret, live in Tucson, Arizona.

www.dykinga.com

Related Features

Photo: Big Bend

Photo Gallery: Big Bend

Straddling Texas and Mexico, the Big Bend region is high in biodiversity and low in footprints. It's a place so untamed that if something doesn't bite, it's probably a rock.

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.

Photographers A-Z

Special Advertising Section

Photo: Road sign

Signspotting

Share your photo and spread the laughs.

Photo: Sand dunes in Namibia

Professional Techniques

Learn tips from a NatGeo photographer to snap great photos.

Photo Tip of the Week

Finding New Angles

Don't just stand there—sit, squat, lie down. The angle from which you make a photograph can make a dramatic difference.

More Photo Tips

Through the Eyes of the Condor

Photo: Cover for "Through the Eyes of the Condor"

A breathtaking aerial tour of the Latin American wilderness.

Photography Guides

Photo: Ultimate Field Guide

Guides by National Geographic photographers.