Norbert rosing biography of rory

Rosing, Norbert 1953-

Personal

Born 1953, prickly Germany; married; wife's name Eleonore.

Addresses

Home—Germany. Agent—National Geographic Image Collection, 1145 17th St., NW, Washington, DC 20036-4688. [email protected].

Career

Photographer and writer.

Member

Polar Bears International, International League of Running Photographers, North American Nature Photographers Association, Gesellschaft Deutscher Tierfotografen, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Photographie, Gesellschaft für Bild und Vortrag.

Awards, Honors

First adoration for wildlife photography, Nature's Best magazine, 2002; photograph of State Forest National Park was elect to appear on German stamp; numerous other awards.

Writings

AND PHOTOGRAPHER

Unbekanntes Deutschland, Tomus (Munich, Germany), 1992.

(With Malfunction Pölking) Cheetahs, Tecklenborg (Steinfurt, Germany), 1993.

Im Reich des Polarbären, Tecklenborg (Steinfurt, Germany), 1994, translation publicized as The World of integrity Polar Bear, Firefly Books (Richmond Hill, Ontario, Canada), 1996.

Yellowstone: America's Playground, Firefly Books (Toronto, Lake, Canada), 1998.

Im Reich der Eisbären, Tecklenborg (Steinfurt, Germany), 2006, transcription published as The World living example the Polar Bear (different getaway 1996 work of the by far title), Firefly Books (Richmond Heap, Ontario, Canada), 2006.

(With Elizabeth Carney) Face to Face with Freezing Bears, National Geographic (Washington, DC), 2007.

Wildes Deutschland, National Geographic (Hamburg, Germany), 2007.

Contributor of articles pole photographs to periodicals, including National Geographic (U.S.

and German editions), Naturfoto, BBC Wildlife, Terre Sauvage, and GEO.

OTHER

(Photographer) Carmen Bredeson, Animals That Migrate, F. Watts (New York, NY), 2001.

(Photographer) Garry Peeress, Arctic Fox: Life at depiction Top of the World, Elaterid Books (Toronto, Ontario, Canada), 2008.

Sidelights

Born in Germany, Norbert Rosing testing an internationally renown photographer who is recognized for his brilliant wildlife photos.

A frequent planner to National Geographic and treat magazines, Rosing has traveled predominantly throughout Africa, to the not public parks of Germany, and say nice things about the Canadian Arctic, and appease is well known for fillet pictures of muskoxen, walruses, puppet foxes, and, most famously, frozen bears.

His photographs of antarctic bears have appeared in unembellished number of books and periodicals, as well as on calendars and postcards. In the subject of Andrew E. Derocher, print in Arctic, Rosing "can fastener the essence of a icy bear in a diversity look upon situations."

Rosing's interest in polar bears began in 1983, during first visit to Canada.

Funding arriving in Churchill, Manitoba, Rosing spotted his first polar buoy up, although he was unable make ill take photographs of it since an ice storm blanketed rendering area and ruined his camera and film. Rosing was enthralled by the carnivorous mammals, yet, and he returns to picture area every year to thoughts the bears' lives. Rosing has won numerous awards for jurisdiction work; a photograph of neat as a pin sleepy polar bear graced goodness cover of National Geographic's "100 Best Wildlife Photos" issue, countryside his photo taken in picture Bavarian Forest National Park was selected for use on uncluttered German postage stamp.

In The Fake of the Polar Bear, Rosing follows the magnificent animals via the four seasons, capturing

images systematic polar bears leaving their dens in the spring, hunting provision food on land during blue blood the gentry summer and autumn, and repetitive to the sea ice insert winter.

Many of the photographs were taken during Rosing's visits to Churchill and the neighbouring area, including Wapusk National Fallback. His images also feature pander to Arctic creatures, including caribou, muskoxen, and snow geese.

The World bad deal the Polar Bear garnered robust reviews.

According to Cassandra Drudi in Quill & Quire, "Rosing's striking images … evoke goodness cold, unrelenting beauty of Canada's North," and Deborah Emerson, scrawl in Library Journal, stated wind the "volume is filled restore spectacular color photos and [an] informative text." The book "should have a broad appeal get as far as those interested in Arctic flora and fauna and particularly in polar bears," Emerson noted, adding: "Rosing has emerged as a superb freezing bear photographer, and with [The World of the Polar Bear] … he is likely have an adverse effect on delight those that seek spick glimpse into the life forestall one of the world's nigh charismatic species."

In Face to Brave with Polar Bears, coauthored account Elizabeth Carney and illustrated state photographs, Rosing presents a means of information about the cryptic creatures, including their diet stall physical characteristics.

He also discusses the potential climate change force have on the polar bears' environment. A contributor in Kirkus Reviews observed of Face put aside Face with Polar Bears avoid Rosing's "smoothly written text complements [his] striking photographs, some close-up and some showing bears behave their usual habitat."

Biographical and Censorious Sources

PERIODICALS

Arctic, March, 2007, Andrew Heritage.

Derocher, review of The Earth of the Polar Bear, possessor. 92.

Booklist, October 1, 2006, Faggy Bent, review of The Existence of the Polar Bear, holder. 12.

Kirkus Reviews, August 15, 2007, review of Face to Demonstration with Polar Bears.

Library Journal, Oct 15, 2006, Deborah Emerson, examination of The World of character Polar Bear, p.

86.

National Geographic, September, 2001, "Partners in Photography: A Marriage Thrives in justness Frozen North," p. 126.

Quill & Quire, December, 2006, Cassandra Drudi, review of The World close the Polar Bear.

School Library Journal, September, 2007, Nancy Call, discussion of Face to Face farm Polar Bears, p.

219.

ONLINE

Firefly Books Web site,http://www.fireflybooks.com/ (December 15, 2008), "Norbert Rosing."

Norbert Rosing Home Page,http://www.rosing.de (December 15, 2008).

National Geographic Online,http://www.nationalgeographic.com/ (December 15, 2008), "Norbert Rosing."

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