Tag Archives: photographer

Making Plans


I know where I will be July 4th. Do you?

I’ve just added two of my favorite shows to my 2016 schedule and I am getting itchy feet to get the travel season under way.

fireworks1

Des Moines Arts Festival
Des Moines, Iowa
June 24-26, 2016

&

Cherry Creek Arts Festival
Denver, Colorado
July 2-4, 2016

 

I am continuing to hear from shows, so my year’s travel schedule is not fully completed. If you want to make sure that you’re invited to any shows I am doing in your area, or know someone that should receive an invitation, be sure to get on my email list and you won’t miss a thing!


 

Manifesto

I don’t make New Year’s resolutions but I did write a manifesto at the beginning of our six week camping trip last summer. A declaration of my intentions for the time away from our normal routine were written on an easily accessible index card that was shoved in my pocket, my backpack, the dash of the van or wherever I was most likely to see it. And, when we returned home, I carried it in my bag where I would see it every time I went for my keys.

What served me well on my vacation continues to serve me well at home, and at the risk of sounding trite, has made home a little more like vacation.

A little worse for wear.

A little worse for wear.

Manifesto, resolution, intentions, mantra whatever you want to call it I plan to continue it on into 2016.

 

How about you? Do you make resolutions? Manifestos? A word of the year (which I can’t resist since I love individual words so much)? A theme?

Pick of the week, February 16

“When all the world appears to be in a tumult, and nature itself is feeling the assault of climate change, the seasons retain their essential rhythm. Yes, fall gives us a premonition of winter, but then, winter, will be forced to relent, once again, to the new beginnings of soft greens, longer light, and the sweet air of spring.” —  Madeleine M. Kunin

Mile Marker 523

Pick of the week

“The sky is the soul of all scenery. It makes the earth lovely at sunrise and splendid at sunset. In the one it breathes over the earth a crystal-like ether, in the other a liquid gold.” — Thomas Cole

Mile Marker 479, 22"x34"

Mile Marker 479, 22″x34″

An Occasional Pause of Wonder

California Redwoods

California Redwoods

As I set off into the new year, I spend a fair amount of time looking at the past. I compare what transpired to the goals I set for myself and the studio, and plan ahead for the year to come. This seems almost universal at this time of year, and I have been contemplating why. And, like so many things in my life, I have found understanding of it in my studio, in the images I have taken, and in the experience of taking them.

Kyle and I have spent a fair amount of time over the last couple of years on paths, forested hiking paths in the mountains, small trails along the bluff overlooking the ocean, an assortment of rails to trails for biking. I am often sorely disappointed that I, for a variety of reasons, can’t seem to capture adequate images of the experience. First, when I find myself in a new environment, I study it and understanding doesn’t come right away. It is this understanding that gives me the ability to capture the meaning of a place. Second, I am attempting to stay present and somehow, no matter what camera it is that I bring to my eye, the act of taking a picture pulls me away from the moment.  And last, you can’t always see the forest for the trees. (You saw that coming didn’t you?)

Isn’t that the way it is with our year? The planning and anticipation of the hike ahead is a wonderful part of the experience. But while we are en route we are watching our step, thinking of the task at hand, perhaps pushing ourselves a bit further than we think we can go, with only an occasional pause of wonder. And finally, when we have returned to the campsite, and slowed our breathing as we look into the fire, we get some perspective, and only then can we see the sum of the parts and find understanding.

 

Pick of the week, Oct 20

“Idleness is to the human mind like rust to iron.” — Ezra Cornell

After years of working with metal, this is the piece (a print on PAPER) I made for this year’s annual show, “Love Rust: A Celebration of Oxidation”  at the Trap Gallery in Columbus Park.  Closing reception for the show will be held Nov 8, 2014

Framed and unframed prints available.

Not an Architectural Photographer…

Last week I made it pretty clear the I am not a wedding photographer – this week I provide evidence that neither am I an architectural photographer. Although the Bloch Building by Steven Holl at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art makes it pretty damn hard not to be… How lucky are we in Kansas City to have this masterpiece?

 

Nelson126Nelson40Nelson24Nelson56Nelson54Nelson49Nelson127Nelson7Nelson9Nelson96Nelson66Nelson31Nelson82

Help us Lighten Our Load

Summer Update

80 inches of zipper!

Kyle and I are back in KC for a few minutes between tours. Just long enough for me to present a new series of artwork, Kyle to perform in a charming theater run of Rudyard Kipling’s “Just So Stories”, and for us to brush up on our sewing skills for a bit of a camper renovation before our tour west. Continue reading »

Leopold Gallery

Come help me celebrate!

I’m super excited to announce my new partnership with the LEOPOLD Gallery in beautiful Brookside in Kansas City, MO.

 

 

If you would like to receive invitations like this right to your inbox when I am showing in your area please sign up for email notifications.

Last Bite – Pete Dulin and Roy Inman

Do you plan out the “end game” for your dinner plate?

 

Pete Dulin and Roy Inman

Kyle, my husband, is perfectly willing to share a taste off his dinner plate. However, if he is nearing the end of his meal, you have missed your opportunity, because he has thoughtfully considered the closing strategy and decided upon his last bite, the one he will savor longer than the others, the one worth lingering over.

Food writer and editor, Pete Dulin, has given the same thoughtful consideration to his new cookbook, Last Bite. Continue reading »