The Desert Light September/October 2018 | Page 6

A self-titled photo educator from Santa Monica College, his life as a teacher, has helped many young artists pursue their dreams through his Master Classes and award-winning assignments. Many of his proteges have moved onto pursue their goals on the international stage which has helped Burkhart garner partnerships with prestigious programs like Eddie Adams and funding from the Getty Museum. And it is no wonder. Gerard’s work has been listed on the Fulbright Specialists Roster to engage in educational diplomacy for the U.S. State Department and published in the New York Times and Pulitzer Prize-winning editions of the Los Angeles Times. Burkhart’s eye for the dramatic and his creative instincts pull what could be disjointed landscape imagery into a developed theme. Yet, he can’t escape his city roots. Like excellent street photography, Burkhart doesn’t shy away from revealing his source of light. Red light paints the rock and Joshua Trees in two of the images (left). Banshee Canyon, Hole in the Wall Mojave Yucca, Hole in the Wall 6 THE DESERT LIGHT | Sept/Oct 2018 In one the source of a backlight stands like a street lamp witnessing some event on the city stage. The Joshua Tree standing alone, caught in the limelight for all to see. A dramatic moment and yet we feel as though we’ve been let in on a secret. A flash in time – like street photography. Here, the horizon is askew as though the photographer were in a hurry and just captured the image before life moved on. The ‘street-light’ flares the lens, but there is no other way he could’ve captured this moment. The drama unfolds in the night on the desert floor.