Photographer Paul Bride began his career capturing climbers on towering cliffs and frozen peaks, where he developed not only a remarkable eye but a sky-high tolerance for risk—and an addiction to its rewards. Over the past twenty-five years, his relentless pursuit of extraordinary images has led him to striking locales and sketchy situations around the world, from reef breaks in Tahiti to armed checkpoints in the tribal regions of Ethiopia, frozen waterfalls in the Rockies to cartel shootouts in Panama.
In his first monograph, Bride tramples genre conventions to share a thrilling selection of more than 200 photos from all these places and more, uniting the kaleidoscopic array with often-harrowing stories of how they were made and reflections on the uncommon power they hold. These are photographic dispatches from the chase—the product of a lifelong obsession with finding indelible moments that seem to exist outside time, and that produce images as difficult to forget as they are to make.
Most of these photos have never been posted or published. Organized into five sections (Climbing, People, Water, Travel, Storms), each of which includes a double-page foldout, they include a mix of dizzying action shots, jaw-dropping landscapes, and stirring portraits. In his foreword, legendary climber Sonnie Trotter speaks to the passion that sustained Bride through his self-proclaimed “dirtbag” days; in his introduction and extended captions, Bride wrestles with the demons and motivations that have shaped his career. Paul Bride: Until the Light Dies is an extraordinary collection that reveals how a passion verging on madness can create images you didn’t know were possible.
Author
Paul Bride is a professional photographer who has devoted nearly three decades to capturing the intersection of beauty and grit in spectacular locations all around the world. His many clients have included Arc’teryx (as an expedition team member from 2005–20), Black Diamond, KUIU, Lowepro, MEC, Mitsubishi Canada, Patagonia, Redbull, Whistler/Blackcomb, and Yeti; and his editorial work has appeared in the New York Times, the Globe and Mail, and dozens of magazines, including Climbing, Explore, Mountain Life, National Geographic Adventure, Outside, Photo News, Powder, and Skier. His work has been shown at the Banff Mountain Film Festival and galleries across Canada, and among his many awards and honours he is a two-time Redbull Illume finalist, winner of the International Photography Award and the Memorial Maria Luisa International Photography Contest, and a finalist for the CVCE International Mountain Photography Contest. When he’s not chasing wild experiences across the planet Bride lives in Britannia Beach, British Columbia.
More About Paul Bride
Sonnie Trotter was born and raised in the flatlands of southern Ontario, where he began climbing as a teenager. On a trip to Colorado he fell in love with mountains and the vagabond lifestyle, and lived out of various vehicles for many years. He won a national championship in his early 20s but left competitive climbing to focus on developing new routes and pushing the limits of outdoor climbing. His accomplishments span nearly every discipline, from deep-water soloing to big wall free climbs. Trotter lives with his wife, Lydia, and their two children in Canmore, Alberta, where he works as a writer, photographer, product developer, coach, and guide.
More About Sonnie Trotter