Klepper always carried a camera around when he was a kid in San Antonio, often shooting
on a used Minolta he received as a birthday present when he turned 14.
He went to North Texas for what was then its art department, considered one of the best in the state. He also had personal connections to Denton
and North Texas. His great-grandparents ran a general store and boarding house in
town in the late 1800s. And his parents were alumni -- Dan Klepper ('55) became a noted outdoors journalist and Nancy Klepper ('53) became a biologist.
While at North Texas, Klepper studied studio art and worked at HMS Art and Frame Shop. He hadn't considered photography as a career.
Then a friend mentioned that the anthropology department had received a grant from
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and they needed someone to photograph the land that
would eventually be flooded by the building of Lake Ray Roberts (which wouldn't be
completed until 1987). He took the job.
He and an archeologist traveled around Aubrey, Pilot Point and Sanger, where he captured
the plains and rolling hills.
"What was most interesting to me, in retrospect, is the land was a metaphor for when
you're really living in the moment and nothing will change. But everything changes.
When I photographed the landscape, it literally was going to disappear. It wasn't
just going to be a memory."