Carr Clifton (born April 17, 1957 in California) is a local American landscape, nature and wilderness photographer.
[1] A native Californian living in the northern Sierra Nevada near Taylorsville, California, Carr began photographing and color printing professionally in 1979 after seeking advice and inspiration from his mentor and neighbor, pioneering 20th century master landscape and conservation photographer Philip Hyde.
[2] Credits include a US Postal Service stamp of Acadia National Park[3] and numerous exhibit format books.
[6] Carr's book, Wild by Law,[7] is the result of his collaboration with Earthjustice (previously Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund) and is a visual documentation of the impact environmental law has made on our nation's institutions and conservation policies.
Collaborating with author Wade Davis and the International League of Conservation Photographers, Carr's most recent project, The Sacred Headwaters, The Fight to Save the Stikine, Skeena and Nass features photographs from Carr and other iLCP photographers, conveying the importance of protecting a unique, fragile and extraordinary ecosystem[8][9] Three Women, Three Hundred Miles, Defiance House Pictures, 2003 Commercial Photography Degree, 1979, Colorado Mountain College, Glenwood Springs, Colorado[10]