About Us

About

Judy Hill Lovins &
Amory Lovins Fine Art
Photography

Sharing the same love for landscape and nature photography, we travel together and create photographs all over the world. At home, we live and work in our net-energy-producing passive-solar banana farm in Old Snowmass, near Aspen.

Judy’s story: I was born in Colorado in 1945, grew up in eastern Oregon, and earned my Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration,

It’s an absolute blast when we embark on journeys and explore together, immersing ourselves in nature while taking pictures of magnificent landscapes. Nothing is more satisfying than making new memories as we travel to different parts of the world and discover picture-perfect places.

Judy Hill Lovins & Amory Lovins Fine Art Photography is your go-to destination for high-quality landscape and nature photography. We have years of experience capturing photograph from all corners of the world, and bringing out the most vivid colors. We create amazing compositions so every photo tells its own story. 

Our home in Old Snowmass, Colorado, a state-of-the-art green home and indoor growing space at 7,100 feet, is remarkably energy efficient. It includes several renewable technologies, and has no conventional heating and cooling system. We are hooked into the grid, but actually use less electricity than we make and receive a small refund check every year from our electric co-op. We also run two electric cars on the electricity the house produces.

 

co-founder

Amory Lovins 

In 2007, I married physicist Amory Lovins—co-founder and Chief Scientist, now Chairman Emeritus, of RMI (Rocky Mountain Institute) and Adjunct Professor at Stanford. A world-renowned energy innovator and practitioner, author of 31 books and over 800 papers, and designer of superefficient buildings, vehicles, and factories, he’s received many of the world’s top energy and environmental awards. His landscape photographs have hung in London’s V&A Museum and been featured in two of David Brower’s Exhibit Format books in “The Earth’s Wild Places” series for Friends of the Earth.

Our home in Old Snowmass, Colorado, a state-of-the-art green home and indoor growing space at 7,100 feet, is remarkably energy efficient. It includes several renewable technologies, and has no conventional heating and cooling system. We are hooked into the grid, but actually use less electricity than we make and receive a small refund check every year from our electric co-op. We also run two electric cars on the electricity the house produces.