21st Century Hieroglyphics Exhibit Opens September 5

•August 23, 2009 • Comments Off on 21st Century Hieroglyphics Exhibit Opens September 5

I will be opening the exhibit, “21st Century Hieroglyphics” exhibit at the Contemporary School for the Arts and Gallery in Hagerstown on Saturday, Sepember 5.

The exhibit consists of poster-size prints from images captured in an old quarry in Quincy, Massachusetts. I have made two trips to this place and it continues to be fascinating. The rough granite walls of this quarry are covered with an amazing array of spray-painted color and commentary that ranges from poignant to sinister to celebratory to downright chaotic.

As I walked around the area, I tried to imagine what an archeologist a thousand years from now would think upon the discovery of these strange messages painted on rock walls. Would they know about it that far in the future or would they look at this as evidence of some religious cult or political uprising.

Here are a few more examples from an earlier blog post.

The gallery is located at 4 West Franklin Street in Hagerstown. The opening reception is Saturday, September 5 from 6-9pm.

HDRI Workshop September 26-27

•August 23, 2009 • 2 Comments

Those of you who received my newsletter a few days ago received the information about my upcoming High Dynamic Range Imaging (HDRI) workshop coming up in September. SmithR-HDR-35Details on the workshop including online registration is on my web site.

High dynamic range imaging is not just another special effect technique. It allows the photographer to capture and display the full range of luminance in a scene. The latest software tools allow you to process the images to look completely natural, yet reproducing full detail in shadow areas without blowing out the highlights. It’s not about altering reality (unless you want to) but it’s actually about reproducing a scene in the full range of luminance that you can see with your eyes. On the other hand, you can introduce a great variety of different looks to an image. It’s really only limited by your imagination.

For those who are not all that familiar with HDR, I’ve assembled a group of images on my new SmugMug gallery that illustrate the range of treatments that are possible with HDR Imaging.

You can see that there is a range of effects from very natural – no real indication that it is HDR – to a “painterly” effect to a highly processed “grunge” effect. In some cases the goal was a natural look with a slightly “painterly” feel. In other cases the “painterly” effect is more pronounced. The point is that the HDR software along with Photoshop gives a wide range of control over how your image will ultimately look.

After taking my workshop, you will be able to capture HDR images and process them to whatever level of effect is right for your particular images. Please contact me at sterlingimageswv (at) gmail (dot) com if you are interested in the workshop but have questions.

Maine Workshop, Postscript

•August 15, 2009 • Comments Off on Maine Workshop, Postscript

The workshop officially ended Friday night with a great multimedia presentation of work from all of the workshops that week. It was pretty cool to see several of my images projected on a theater sized screen.

But thanks to the generosity of our instructor Tillman Crane, there was a wonderful unexpected bonus in store for some of us on Saturday morning. We were invited to visit his home and studio in nearby Camden, Maine, for a demonstration of platinum-palladium printing.

The process is on one hand complex, yet in other ways fairly straighforward. First, Tillman mixes small amounts of several chemicals, including platinum and palladium, into a solution that is coated onto the paper. By varying the amount of each element, he can control contrast and tone in the print. Once the paper is dry (he uses a hair dryer to dry the paper in just a couple of minutes!) he sets up the negative and paper in a vacuum contact printing frame and exposes the print in a specially made light box where the paper is exposed to high intensity ultra-violet light.

From there, the print is developed in a process that is very similar to the processing of a silver print except that the chemicals are different.

Platinum-palladium prints have a different look from traditional silver prints. My perception is that while the prints are rich in tone, the blacks are typically not quite as deep, but the tonal transitions are beautifully smooth. The prints generally have a slight warm tone to them but that is controllable by the chemical mix in the emulsion.

The darkroom for platinum printing is not nearly as dark as in a standard darkroom for silver printing. The emulsion is primarily sensitive to UV light so the room is lit with 40-watt “bug” lights and the paper is perfectly safe. I realized that for old-time platinum printers – the process was invented in the 1880s – the only way to expose the paper was to set the print frame out in the sun!

All in all, it was a great week. I thoroughly enjoyed Tillman’s workshop and the others in the class were diverse, interesting, and very talented. While I learned much from Tillman, I also got valuable insights from my classmates.

I waited a long time to take the plunge into one of these workshops. Having done so, I am already hoping to return for another, and another.

Maine Workshop, Day 5

•August 15, 2009 • Comments Off on Maine Workshop, Day 5

The last day of the workshop dawned dark, gray, and rainy. Undaunted, our class traveled to Fort Knox. No, not in Kentucky, but Fort Knox State Park in Maine. No gold here, but a massive structure of granite and brick that was built to guard approaches to Bangor, Maine near the mouth of the Penobscot River.

Due to the rain, we worked mostly inside the fort, which featured many arched passageways and long, dark corridors. Many of the spaces were lit by narrow gun ports. The soft subdued light filtering in from the outside was ideal for long exposure images of the interior.

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The interesting light also gave some opportunities for some HDR (High Dynamic Range) images.

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This is a place where I could return again and again, finding new things on every trip. Unfortunately, it’s a day and a half drive from home, so I will have just have to find a way to take more Maine workshops to get me closer for at least a few days at a time.

Maine Workshop Days 3 & 4

•August 2, 2009 • Comments Off on Maine Workshop Days 3 & 4

Wednesday I was dispatched Rockport to photograph a park. It was a pretty ordinary park, but my assignment was to find an extraordinary image anyway. I can’t say that I was particularly successful, but I did a number of shots of the white birch trees that I always find attractive due to their textures.

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Then after lunch we were off to the obligatory lighthouse, where I saw first hand the “rocky Maine coast.” It had been heavy overcast all morning but as we arrived the clouds started to break up. With a fresh breeze off the ocean, the temperature became comfortable and it ended up being a delightful outing.

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Thursday brought more rain and cloudy weather but we were undaunted. We visited the Olsen House in Cushing, Maine, a favorite with the Workshops. Once the home of Maine Artist Andrew Wyeth, this old farmhouse has been preserved as a museum. The cloudy weather provided wonderful soft light through the windows and doors of the house and everyone found much to photograph. Here are just a small sampling of the images I found.

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I’ll be working up many more from the Olsen house over the next few months.

Maine Workshop Day 2

•July 29, 2009 • Comments Off on Maine Workshop Day 2

I’m making two posts today to try to get caught up. I was hoping to update this day to day during the workshop but each day was full of class discussion, shooting, and editing. It was a very intense but rewarding week.

The second day of the workshop got beyond photographing my room and the next assignment was photographing the Rockport Library. I can’t say that I acquired any “extraordinary” images there, but I enjoyed the process. It was a very nice small town library with a touch of nostalgia.

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The children’s section was especially nice.

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After lunch, we piled into two cars and went off to Elmer’s Barn, a truly extraordinary place! Having prowled “antique” and downright junk stores in many places, this place was the ultimate. In about two hours, we were barely able to scratch the surface.

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As I was wandering around this place, I definitely saw it in black and white.

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The old car was gradually being swallowed up by the weeds.

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Inside was unimaginable chaos, but one got the impression that the old gentleman who ran the place knew just about everything that was in there and where to find it – not to mention its value.

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Little gems like this were everywhere, in among the piles of old tools, rusty hardware, old bottles, and who knows what.

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Maine Workshop, Day 1

•July 29, 2009 • Comments Off on Maine Workshop, Day 1

I returned from Rockport to Braintree last Saturday having completed a great workshop with Tillman Crane.

The workshop, entitled “Extraordinary Images in Ordinary Places,” was not about technical things or even about technique. It was more about how you think about looking for images.

There were six of us in the class and we photographed different things every day and followed up by critique and discussion.

Each day, we were assigned “ordinary” places to photograph. The locations ranged from local parks, to locations around the Workshops campus. My first assignment was to photograph my room! Daunted that I was – this was a very plain vanilla motel style room – I went in with determination to come out with something. What I came out with was so abstract that nobody could tell what it was until I showed a different angle.

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Then I moved the camera a bit …

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My idea was to do a study of the way the light reflected off the different surfaces.

Not exactly “high art” but still an interesting exercise.

21st Century Hieroglyphics

•July 18, 2009 • Comments Off on 21st Century Hieroglyphics

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Yesterday I made my second visit to and old quarry in Quincy, Massachusetts. An area that at one time was filled with water has been filled in with earth, probably to prevent people from being injured or killed diving into the quarry water. The result is a grassy space surrounded by rock cliffs that have been liberally decorated with a wide variety of graffitti.

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Looking at these granite walls, you are assaulted by a visual cacophony of abstract designs, haunting beings, social commentary, and even memorials to those who have passed on.

Having photographed the graffitti last year in detail, and with my follow-up images, I am planning an exhibit at the Contemporary School for the Arts and Gallery in Hagerstown, Maryland, opening September 5. Revisiting the site gave me a chance to reshoot a couple of things from a year ago and capture some new views.

Here are a few more from the raw files from yesterday:

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I’ll have more details about the exhibit in a future post.

Boston

•July 16, 2009 • Comments Off on Boston

071509_0092_3_4We made the drive to Boston on Tuesday and are staying for a few days with my friend Allen in Braintree, a suburb south of Boston.

The weather yesterday was magnificent so we took the commuter boat from Quincy into downtown Boston and trekked around enjoying the day and the sights. We worked our way to the Back Bay area, which is the “other” downtown.

The new John Hancock Insurance headquarters building is an astonishing architectural achievement by I. M. Pei and Henry N. Cobb.

Depending on which direction you approach it from, you might see what looks like a basically rectangular structure which lacks design. But as you walk around the building, you notice that the corners of the building are not right angles, but the footprint of the building is a parallelogram, giving the impression of a knife edge from certain angles.

Walking around the back Bay area the building dominates the view but in many ways the farther away you get from the building the more impressive it gets.

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The building’s surface is like a mirror, reflecting all around it and esssentially using the surrounding area as it’s facade.

At right, The “old” John Hancock headquarters building is reflected in the mirror-like surface of the “new” tower.

Boston is a fascinating city with some great architecture spanning literally centuries from colonial times up to the current century.

Workshops

•July 10, 2009 • Comments Off on Workshops

The other night I went to the first meeting of a 3 month workshop/course let by Benita Keller, a West Virginia photographer and teacher.

I was attracted to this workshop because of the emphasis on stretching my vision but will require me to go back into my memory to remember how to work with black and white film in the darkroom.

I have gotten so committed to digital that I had to buy a 35mm SLR so I could participate in the workshop. As it turned out, I found a good Nikon N90s on Ebay for $97 plus shipping!

The course covers the genres of landscape, events, portraiture and photojournalism and the goal will be for the participants to photograph people, places, and events in Jefferson County, WV for the next couple of months and then present the results of our work in an exhibit in October. The whole thing got me fascinated enough to buy the camera so I could participate.

The first meeting was mostly introductory, with several of the eight participants having little or no experience in a darkroom. So much of the discussion was an overview of darkroom procedures and a orientation to the community darkroom in Shepherdstown. Although I did a lot of black and white film processing and printing back in the 80s and early 90s, I found the review to be very useful to get my brain focused on the process. It’s been something like 17 or 18 years since I made a serious black and white print in a darkroom.

Anyway, tomorrow I will be going in for a hands-on introduction to the equipment and maybe try to make a print.

Meanwhile, I will be missing the next two meetings of this workshop because I will be leaving next week for the Maine Media Workshops where I will take a week-long workshop with fine art photographer and teacher Tillman Crane. I am really excited about this because I have wanted to take one of their workshops for many years.

The title of the workshop is “Extraordinary Images in Ordinary Places.” I was really attracted to this concept because I do not have many opportunities to travel to “extraordinary” places. I also really like Tillman’s work.

Hopefully, I will be able to post some impressions and stories about these experiences. Stay tuned …