Luis Marden | |
|---|---|
| Born | Annibale Luigi Paragallo January 25, 1913 Chelsea, Massachusetts, U.S. |
| Died | March 3, 2003 (aged 90) Arlington, Virginia, U.S. |
| Spouse | Ethel Cox Marden |
Luis Marden (bornAnnibale Luigi Paragallo) (January 25, 1913 – March 3, 2003) was an American photographer, explorer, writer, filmmaker, diver, navigator, and linguist who worked forNational Geographic Magazine. He worked as a photographer and reporter before serving as chief of theNational Geographic foreign editorial staff. He was a pioneer in the use ofcolor photography, both on land and underwater, and also made many discoveries in the world of science.
Though he officially retired in 1976, Marden continued to write occasional stories. In total, he wrote more than 60 articles for the magazine.
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Born inChelsea, Massachusetts, ofItalian heritage, Marden went by the nameLouis Paragallo while growing up in nearbyQuincy. Marden was introduced to photography at a chemistry class while attendingQuincy Senior High School. His interest was intense and lasting. In 1932, at the age of 19, he wrote a book calledColor Photography with the Miniature Camera, which may be the first book ever published on 35mm color photography.
Marden began his career at theWMEX radio station in the Boston area, where he had a photography program called Camera Club of the Air. On his station manager's recommendation, he changed his name toLuis Marden, his newsurname a random selection from aphone book. He then worked as a freelance photographer forThe Boston Herald.
His expertise in color photography subsequently brought him toNational Geographic magazine, where he was officially hired on July 23, 1934. The magazine prided itself on publishing quality color photography, and Marden was making good use of a lightweightLeica, which could hang from a single neck strap. Marden persuaded the magazine to see the benefits of using the small35mm cameras loaded with the newKodachrome film over the bulky cameras withtripods andglass plates that were being used by the magazine's photographers at the time.
Marden's first assignment as a reporter was in theYucatán Peninsula. After sailing on atramp steamer, Marden explored the peninsula with aModel T Ford. He then acquired amule.
Marden died of complications fromParkinson's disease inArlington, Virginia, at the age of 90.
In 1986 Marden and his wife Ethel Cox Marden, who was trained as amathematician, attempted to replot the route they believedChristopher Columbus must have taken across theAtlantic. Though officially retired, Marden set sail from theCanary Islands to retrace Columbus's voyage to theNew World. The Mardens concluded that Columbus made his first landfall—Columbus's "Guanahani"—atSamana Cay, not atSan Salvador Island, also posited as Columbus's landfall, arguing that Columbus had landed much farther south than was initially believed.
As a teenager, Marden had taught himself at least fivelanguages as well asEgyptian hieroglyphs and later studied many others. His office is reported to have had stacks ofdictionaries and grammars in different languages, includingTahitian,Fijian,Latin,Spanish,French,Italian,Danish,Arabic,Tongan,Turkish, andMāori[5] Marden is cited as an authority inWebster's Third New International Dictionary for words such as "snick," "tot," and "sevillana."
Marden was an avidfly-fisherman, which led to his interest inbamboo, of which finerfly rods are made. This love led him to the bamboo groves ofChina'sGuangdong, thereby becoming, in 1974, the firstNational Geographic representative since theCommunist Revolution of 1949 to return to this country. Marden observed and photographed the cultivation and processing of Tonkin bamboo in its restricted growing area in southern China.
This assignment produced the article "Bamboo, The Giant Grass" (1980). "Raw material for implements of peace and war, this botanical cousin torice,corn, andKentucky bluegrass may be the world's most useful plant," Marden would write.[6] Marden also recounted the under-the-table maneuverings he engaged in for entry to Maoist China.
Marden made his own bamboo fishing rods. In 1997, he published his second book,The Angler's Bamboo, which not only describes the cultivation and processing of Tonkin bamboo, but also traces the history of the split-bamboo fishing rod.[7]
Marden served as chief of theNational Geographic foreign editorial staff, in which capacity he met and maintained friendships withKing Hussein of Jordan and theKing of Tonga and was knighted by theItalian government.
Marden and his wife, Ethel Cox Marden, lived in "Fontinalis" (also known asMarden House), a house overlooking thePotomac built byFrank Lloyd Wright between 1952 and 1959. The spot had caught Marden's eye in 1944 when he and his wife and had been fishing forhickory shad (Alosa mediocris) along the Potomac, nearChain Bridge. After purchasing a plot of land, Marden continued the correspondence he had maintained with Wright since 1940, asking the architect to design a home for them. In 1938 Marden had seen a "dream house" inLife that Wright had designed for the typical American family.
It was not until 1952 that the designs from Wright finally came. The house is a flat-roofed,cinderblock home trimmed inmahogany that curves into the side of a hill; it comes to an abrupt point upriver, like thebow of a boat. "Our beautiful house ... stands proudly just under the brow of the hill, looking down always on the rushing water which constantly sings to it, day and night, winter and summer," Ethel wrote to Wright in 1959.[8]
After Marden moved to a nursing home in 1998, the house was purchased and refurbished byJim Kimsey, co-founder ofAOL, in 2000 for $2.5 million.
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