Adam,
Perhaps you shouldn’t make too much of this issue. Tommy has introduced a very good topic with the bunker case studies. I simply disagree with the approach he has taken for reasons I’ve already expressed. Rather than debate one issue endlessly, at some point you have to move on. I doubt anyone is enthusiastic about every thread, no matter how well intentioned the originator might have been.
Just in case you have any interest in the issue of “context” as it relates to the art of bunkers, here are twenty examples that collectively just might change your view:
Geoff Shackelford
Alister Mackenzie’s Cypress Point Club
P. 102 (CP #6)
David Scaletti
The Sandbelt
Cover (Kingston Heath #3)
George Peper
500 Greatest Golf Holes
P. 29 (Bethpage Black #5)
Mike Klemme
A View From The Rough
P. 5 (Colleton River #15)
Peter Allen
Play The Best Courses
P. 143 (Sunningdale Old #7)
Warner Shelly
Pine Valley Golf Club
P. 67 (PV #17)
Robert Trent Jones
Golf’s Magnificent Challenge
P. 152 (Valderrma #15)
William Davis
100 Greatest Golf Courses
P. 130-131 (Seminole #6)
Micheal Fay
Golf As Is Was Meant to Be Played
P. 138-139 (Essex #11)
Harry McCaw
Royal Country Down Golf Club
P. v-vi (RCD #4)
Robert Trebus
Baltusrol 100 Years
P. 89 (Baltusrol Lower #3)
Ron Whitten
The Golf Course
Cover (Wild Dunes #18)
Paul Hornung
Muirfield Village Golf Club
P. 130 (MV #18)
George Thomas
Golf Architecture in America
P. 5 (Ojai #3)
Robert Hunter
The Links
P. 15 (Alwoodley #1)
Tom Simpson
The Architectural Side of Golf
Plate xxxi (Chantilly #15)
Joseph Johnson
Royal Melbourne Golf club
P. 198 (RM West #5)
Fred Hawtree
Colt & Co.
P. 126 (Prestbury Golf Club #5)
Brian Morgan
A World Portrait of Golf
P. 94-95 (RMGC West #5 & #6)
Tom Doak
Life and Work Dr. Alister Mackenzie
P. 121 (Valley Club #15)
In case you would prefer twenty examples from one source, check out “The Art of Golf Design” with paintings by Mike Miller and essays by Goff Shackelford. It is hard to pick a favorite among Miller’s work, though if pressed I’d probably go for Page 104 where Miller presents the 13th hole at Merion. (You also find this painting on the cover of Geoff Shackelford’s “The Golden Age of Golf Design”.)
Geoff’s Golden Age is also filled with examples of putting the art of bunkers in context. You also find a more limited number of examples in his book “The Captain” (about George Thomas) and his “Masters of the Links, Essays on the Art of Golf and Course Design”.
Support for the idea of putting things in context comes from both golf artists and golf photographers. Indeed, the evidence becomes overwhelming when you survey the literature on golf architecture. I mentioned Mike Miller’s paintings. They are stunning. But, you might also want to check out Linda Hartough’s work in “Hallowed Ground, Golf’s Greatest Places”.
As for photographers, John Henebry’s work in “Shadow Creek, From Barren Desert to Desert Oasis” is hard to beat, especially if you are looking for brilliant documentation of bunker work that isn’t anything special. If, by contrast, you are looking for brilliant documentation of bunker work that IS special, stick with David Scalletti’s “The Sandbelt”. It won’t be easy to find anything better.
Finally, I can’t leave this topic without mentioning the work of Joann Dost, a photographer from Pebble Beach, California. Joann’s picture of the 11th hole at Pacific Dunes might be the single best golf picture I’ve ever seen. If you want to see what “context” for a bunker looks like, you’ll have to look up Joann sometime. Even John Henebry, a leading competitor, had to admit Joann did something really special.
Adam, I don’t mean to be presumptuous, but when you survey the good work done documenting the art of bunkers, I’m guessing you will also come away disappointed with how Tommy approached his subject. Being hung up on concealing the identity of the architect undermined the integrity of the exercise in my judgment. Let’s just hope Dick Daley was wrong in suspecting Case Study #1 was about a Fazio bunker.
Tommy:
I should have probably gone for your “don’t participate” option rather than being like the school kid that disrupts class. Sorry. You might want to comfort Adam by letting him know we are of like my mind when it comes to the art of bunkers.
Have no worries about appeasement or “cheap shots”. At the end of the day, you going to come around and agree with me on the issue of “context” when studying the art of bunkers. I’m sure of that!
Pat Mucci:
It continues to amaze me that anyone would think the use of a single, close angle picture is the way to study to art of bunkers.
When I read someone suggest "using imagination", I have to wonder why in the world anyone would go for such an approach. People like Brian Morgan, John Henebry, Geoff Shackelford and countless others have provided us with substantial documentation.
It escapes me why anyone would want to put all that aside.
Tommy knows better!