1977-1979
The Rephotographic
Survey Project
The word "rephotographic" doesn't exist in the English dictionary, but it was the word chosen to represent the spirit of the project Ellen Manchester and JoAnn Verburg and I created in 1977. The Rephotographic Survey Project (RSP) started as an idea, to track down the uncertain locations of historical nineteenth-century survey photographs of the American West and then make new photographs at those sites that were meant to duplicate the original images.
Previous to our project, "repeat photographs" expected. We were made by scientists to compare changes over time to the subjects of existing photographs. often predict The methods geologists used to accurately locate the vantage points to make landscape images formed the basis for our work, but we attempted to extend those methods both technically and conceptually. In the RSP, "rephotog-raphy" meant accurately repeating the original image's camera position, the visual composi-tion, framing, time of year, and time of day of the original photograph while also acknowledging the participation of the photographer in making choices about the many other details that influence the ways photographs may be interpreted.
The project was based on shared curiosity about how lands have changed over a hundred years of human intervention, how historical photographers worked and made their images, and conceptual art - making two images look as similar as possible even though time has changed the subjects and the processes used to record them. Urban growth, mining sites, and water impoundments formed the largest changes to the land we rephotographed. Yet, in remote locations we found that physical changes were often less than expected. We learned that historical photographers had specific points of view, and we could hs. often predict where they would set up their cameras to record a given scene.
The project had three field seasons. In the first we rephotographed William Henry Jackson's work for the 1873 Hayden Survey in Colorado. We expanded the scope in the second and third seasons to rephotograph the work of Timothy O'Sullivan, John K. Hillers, Andrew Russell, and other photographers for the King and Wheeler Surveys between 1867 and 1873. The project's methodology was devised in the first year as the original team often worked together visiting sites and discussing the process in the field. By the second and third years, team members usually worked separately in the field, attempting to cover as much ground as possible. Project photographers kept detailed records at each site, noting camera and map data that would be useful for future attempts at rephotography.
The photographers Gordon Bushaw and Rick Dingus contributed to the project during the second and third seasons. Altogether, 122 sites ere rephotographed in Colorado, Utah, Nevada, California, Idaho, Arizona, and New Mexico. The project book, Second View: The Rephotographic Survey Project, was published in 1984. When ie book came out I thought it would be my last project in rephotography, but I was wrong.

Directions to the Mountain of the Holy Cross, Colorado, 1977

Copy print and Polaroid print used for measurement, Echo Canyon, Utah
Timothy O'Sullivan, Green River Buttes, Green River, WY, 1872
Mark Klett and Gordon Bushaw for Rephotographic Surgery Project, Castle Rock, Green River, WY, 1979
William Henry Jackson, Hot Springs and the Castle Geyser, 1872
Mark Klett and Gordon Bush for the Rephotographic Survey Project, Crested Hot Springs and the Castle Geyser, Yellowstone National Park, WY, 1978
William Henry Jackson, Devil's Slide, Weber Canyon, UT, ca. 1980
Mark Klett for the Rephotographic Survey Project, Devil's Slide, Weber Canyon, UT, 1978
Timothy O'Sullivan, Cañon de Chile, walls of the Grand Cañon, about 1,200 feet in height, 1873
Mark Klett for the Rephotographic Survey Project, Monument Rock, Canyon de Chelly National Monument, AZ, 1978
William Henry Jackson, Mountain of the Holy Cross in the Great National Range, CO, 1873
Mark Klett and Gordon Bush for the Rephotographic Survey Project, Mountain of the Holy Cross, CO, 1978
Timothy O'Sullivan, Steamboat Springs, Wash Valley, NV, 1868
Mark Klett for the Rephotographic Survey Project, Steamboat Springs, NV, 1979
William Henry Jackson, Moraines on Clear Creek, Valley of the Arkansas, CO, 1873
Mark Klett and JoAnn Verburg for the Rephotographic Survey Project, Clear Creek Reservoir, CO, 1977
Timothy O'Sullivan, Green River Cañon, Upper Cañon, Great Bend, Uinta Mountains, The Horseshoe and Green River below the bend from Flaming Gorge Ridge, 1872
Mark Klett for the Rephotographic Survey Project, Flaming Gorge Reservoir from above the site of the Great Bend, UT, 1978
Timothy O'Sullivan, Shoshone Falls, view across top of the falls, Snake River, ID, 1874
Mark Klett for the Rephotographic Survey Project, Shoshone Falls, restricted water flow, Twin Rivers, ID, 1980
Timothy O'Sullivan, Quartz Mill near Virginia City, 1868
Mark Klett for the Resphotographic Survey Project, Site of the Gould and Curry Mine, Virginia City, NV, 1979
William Henry Jackson, Gateway of the Garden of the Gods, Colorado, 1873
Mark Klett and JoAnn Verburg for the Rephotographic Survey Project, Gateway of the Garden of the Gods, Colorado Springs, CO, 1977
Timothy O'Sullivan, Tertiary Bluffs near Green River City, WY, 1872
Mark Klett for the Rephotographic Survey Project, Teapot Rock and Sugar Bowl, Green River, WY, 1979
Timothy O'Sullivan, Vermillion Creek Cañon looking downstream, 1872
Mark Klett for the Rephotographic Survey Project, Vermillion Creek Canyon, CO, 1979
Timothy O'Sullivan, Historic Spanish record of the Conquest, south side of Inscription Rock, NM, 1873
Mark Klett for the Rephotographic Survey Project, Spanish Inscription, Inscription Rock, El Morro National Monument, NM, 1978
William Henry Jackson, 1875. Georgetown Colorado (United State Geological Survey)
Gordon Bushaw for the Rephotographic Survey Project, 1978. Georgetown Colorado.
1977-1979
Fieldwork Slides

Drying Polaroid negatives in the back of Volkswagon Beatle.

Envelope recording site data for 4x5 negatives.

Cars driving the gateway to the Garden of the Gods, Colorado, 1977.

Gordy Bushaw filling out site data forms at camp in Yellowstone, Wyoming, 1978.

Gordy Bushaw and Doug Munson at the site of O'Sullivan's Castle Rock, Green River, Wyoming, 1979.

JoAnn Verburg and workshops students propping up Mark to match Jackson's vantage point at Garden of the Gods, Colorado, 1977.

Last site of 1979, Vermillion Creek Canyon, Colorado.

Polaroid photographs documenting changing light at Monument Rock, Canyon De Chelly, 1978.

Road passing the Great Eastern, Echo Canyon, Utah, 1978.

Measuring Prints, Twin Lakes, Colorado, 1977.

Mark and ranger with 3000 people waiting for Old Faithful to erupt, Yellowstone, Wyoming, 1978.

Waiting for the light, photographing Mountain of the Holy Cross from Notch Mountain, Colorado, 1978.

Where Timothy O'Sullivan carved his name in Inscription Rock, El Morro, New Mexico, 1973.

Gordy Bushaw and Ranger waiting for Old Faithful to erupt, Yellowstone, Wyoming, 1978.

4x5 camera elevated above tufa knob where Timothy O'Sullivan placed his larger camera to photograph Pyramid Isle, Pyramid Lake, Nevada, 1979.

Inside the ruins of Mummy Cave, Canyon del Muerto, Arizona, 1978.

Checking the location of O'Sullivan's Teapot Rock, Green River, Wyoming, 1978.

Camp in Southeast Wyoming, 1979.

Tools of the trade

Related:
Third Views, Second Sights, A Rephotographic Survey of the American West
Museum of New Mexico Press, Santa Fe, 2004
Second View: The Rephotographic Survey Project, with Ellen Manchester and JoAnn Verburg
University of New Mexico Press, 1984
Seeing Time: Forty Years of Photographs
University of Texas Press, 2020