Acacia Johnson

Photographer
     
To Know The Earth From Above
Location: Anchorage, Alaska
Nationality: USA
Biography: Acacia Johnson is an artist and photographer from Alaska. Drawn to remote places and otherworldly landscapes, her work has focused on the environment, conservation, and the connections between people and place. After receiving a Fulbright grant to... MORE
Private Story
To Know The Earth From Above
Copyright Acacia Johnson 2024
Updated Aug 2022
To Know The Earth From Above: The Pilots Connecting Remote Alaska

Across Alaska’s rugged, diverse, and sparsely populated terrain, one sound can be heard almost anywhere: the distant drone of an aircraft. Only 20% of Alaska is accessible by road, and dozens of its remote settlements, predominantly Alaska Native communities, rely on aircraft for essential services including mail and groceries, medical care, and emergency transport.

Since the first mail-delivery plane took off in 1924, small aircraft—capable of landing on short runways or on natural features like tundra, glaciers, beaches, and water—have played a critical role in Alaska’s development. Today, nearly all of Alaska is highly dependent on aviation, both for essential transport between communities and to access remote wilderness areas. For many pilots, flying is simply a way of life: a way to connect to the landscape and to each other.

Throughout my life in Alaska, I have known flying to have an almost spiritual aspect. It commands attention to safety and a deep respect for the land, weather, and the lives of the people onboard. Yet despite its prevalence, flying in Alaska is frequently romanticized as a dangerous enterprise. The early era of bush flying between the 1920s and 1950s remains renowned for the first bold pilots who flew without weather forecasts, navigational technology, or runways—and who subsequently took risks with the weather, survived repeated crashes, and were often stranded alone in the wilderness. Although the safety of modern aviation has progressed dramatically since that time, the idea that flying in Alaska is dangerous still lingers, to the detriment of professional and private pilots who devote their flying careers to operating safely.

From the city of Anchorage, to the Arctic, to the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, these are portraits of pilots who have been part of the Alaskan aviation community for decades and those who are taking part in shaping its future. Their airplanes also represent a living portrait of Alaska’s past: most aircraft favored by these pilots (models such as the Piper Super Cub and de Havilland Beaver) have been used, maintained, and passed between generations of pilots since their production in the mid-20th century.

“So much has happened before the time of airplanes,” one pilot told me, “…and so much will happen after the time of airplanes.” As the aviation industry undergoes rapid changes with skyrocketing insurance costs, advancements in electric aircraft, and the recent approval of cargo drones, the future of flying in Alaska is unknown. To Know the Earth from Above frames a pivotal moment in time, telling the stories of pilots who connect remote communities, rescue people in need, teach and uplift newer pilots, and transport people to the wildest parts of the state.
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To Know The Earth From Above by Acacia Johnson
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