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March
15– November 9, 2008
In
Our Own Backyard: A Celebration of the East Bay Regional
Parks
Natural
Sciences Side Bays
Presented by the Natural Sciences Department
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The Oakland Museum of California
and East Bay Regional Park District present In
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| Bob Walker, Point
Pinole Twilight, Point Pinole Regional Shoreline,
November 1987. |
Our Own Backyard: A Celebration of the East Bay Regional
Parks, with more than 40 photographs from the museum's Bob
Walker Archive, March 15–November 9, 2008.
The exhibition offers visitors a virtual tour through
the East Bay's most scenic parks and open spaces, following the flow
of water from snow-capped Mt. Diablo downstream and eventually into
the Bay.
Between 1982 and 1992, Bob Walker created
one of the most remarkable portraits of the East Bay landscape ever
captured on film. Walker planned to leave his archive—more
than 40,000 35-mm slides and historical documents—to the Oakland
Museum of California. It came to the museum after his death, in 1992.
The East Bay Regional Park District was
created in 1934 by concerned citizens who wanted to protect surplus
watershed land in the hills over Oakland and Berkeley from development.
“Bob Walker adopted the East Bay Regional Parks—his
photography brought to life the beauty and unique features of our
landscape,” said Park District General Manager Pat O’Brien. “Through
his insightful photographs and passion for preservation, he helped
protect thousands of acres of treasured open space."
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| Bob
Walker, Golden Hills, Diablo Foothills Regional Park,
May 1985. Oakland Museum of California. |
Nearly 75 years later, the East Bay Regional Park
District is the largest regional park agency in the nation, with
65 parks, nearly 100,000 acres of protected space, and 1100 miles
of trails in Alameda and Contra Costa counties.
In Our Own Backyard was curated by Christopher
Beaver, author of After the Storm: Bob Walker and
the East Bay Regional Park District (Wilderness Press, 2007).
He tracks the growth of the Park District via Walker’s images
and documents, video, and audio.
After the Storm includes 80 of Walker’s
magnificent photos. It is also an account of the photographer’s
courageous efforts to document and help preserve the East Bay’s
natural treasures.
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