The book is both a philosophical commentary and a love letter to Jackson Hole, a place that’s shaped Von Doersten as a photographer and a person. He first came to the Tetons as a 10-year-old camper. “Coming to the mountain and the rivers of Wyoming at an early age left an indelible impression on me,” he says. “For me, it just really brought the sense of adventure and taught me self-confidence.”
After college at the University of Montana, GVD, as his friends call him, returned to Jackson and jumped into the world of guiding and outdoor sports. He’d picked up his first camera in school, which became an asset when he headed out on big adventures, like the cowboy days of heli-skiing in Alaska and the first foreign film trips by Teton Gravity Research. In the ‘90s, he started taking photos of pioneering big mountain skiers like Doug Coombs, Jeremy Nobis and Sage Cattabriga-Alosa, documenting expeditions to far-off places. That led him to regular work for brands like The North Face, Patagonia and Red Bull, as well as publications such as Powder Magazine, Outside, The New York Times, and National Geographic.