Thursday, October 13, 2011

Commercial-oriented imagery

A portfolio of images directed at commercial applications like advertising, marketing and reportage:



Baylor Medical Center of Grapevine, 2011

Cool by the pool, 2011

Texas star (graphic) traffic poster, 2011


Banana undressing : Food shot with a twist, 2011

Beach towel, greeting card, poster: Everyone loves
 fun dog pictures, 2011


Stock example with tags like Cargill, railroads and transportation, 2007


Cereal with blueberries for breakfast, 2008

Gas production -- derricks are everywhere -- is a bright
spot in  the North Texas economy, 2010


The Omni Hotel in Fort Worth: Stylized architectural design, 2011


Burger on the grill, 2011


Travel image, Mexico, 2006

Valentine's-oriented graphic, 2007

A woman reflects at the Fort Worth Water Gardens, 2011


Sports

Full circle -- a collection of sports-oriented images bookending my image-making roots:

YOUNG GLADIATORS: TEXAS-STYLE YOUTH FOOTBALL
These images, shown in throwback Black & White, are part of a series documenting middle school, freshman and junior varsity football action in the Fort Worth, Texas suburb of Keller for six weeks in 2010.
The entire series can be seen at http://www.younggladiators.blogspot.com/ 


A player pysches himself before kickoff.


Pinched between a teammate and a defender, a pass receiver
makes an acrobatic catch.


A freshman player glistens in perspiration during a break.


Like their counterparts on the varsity, jayvee cheerleaders
emplore support from fans with equal vigor.

In the post-game light, a team receives from the coaching staff a verbal
 report card of their performance.


CYCLING
A selection of images from a pro cycling event in Dallas in 2010


A cycling team casts shadows during a pre-race warm-up. 

Battle for the early lead.

Cycling poster.


EQUESTRIAN
Images from practice sessions and competition events at the Curragh Equestrian
Center south of Fort Worth, Texas in 2010.


Horse jumping poster.

Horse and rider shadow.


A young equestrian waits her turn to
 warm up for a dressage event.

Dressage practice.


North Texas

A sampling of unique perspectives of the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex and North Texas area:



Longhorns, Stockyards Historical District, Fort Worth, 2011

Fort Worth skyline, from Trinity Park, 2007
 

Victory Plaza, the AAC and the W Hotel, Dallas, 2010


Downtown skyline from the north, Fort Worth, 2006

 
Dallas skyline, framed by opening in parking garage wall, 2010


 Stockyards Historical District, Fort Worth, 2007

Reunion Tower, Dallas, 2010

Windmills, north of Fort Worth, 2008


Frog Fountain, Texas Christian University campus,
 Fort Worth, 2010


Dallas skyline, from field south of Trinity River, 2010


Fort Worth downtown skyline reflected in the window facade of the Amon
 Carter  Museum of American Art, 2007

Trumpeter, Bass Hall facade, from street level, 2006


Fine Art

A sampling of images intended for use as fine art and decor, or in graphic illustrations and paper products:



Flowering lily pads, 2010

Trees in fog, 2008


There's always one in the bunch, 2010


Walkway and fountain, Fort Worth Botanical Garden, (watercolor filter) 2010


Swan posing, Amsterdam, 2007



Hibiscus stamen, 2006

Flamingo figure eight, 2010


 

Fall foliage (digitized Kodachrome transparency), 1979
 

Pulled kicking and screaming into the world of digital imaging

By the mid-2000s and the quality level of digital imaging reaching a level comparable to traditional film-based photography, the decision to move over to the land of the jpeg finally made sense.  Trading the smell of hypo from a traditional darkroom for the point-and-click mouse capabilities of the all-new digital darkroom was always appealing.  But the sacrifice in the quality of the image-viewing experience, forgoing the tactile benefits of a hand-printed silver gelatin photograph or Kodachrome slides for a computer screen and an ink-jet produced print, was still too much.

In 2006 I finally broke down and rationalized the move: no more film canisters; no more waiting for results; no more extra cost from waste; no more wrong exposures.  All good things, and -- with careful application of the new tenets of imaging -- quality images too.  Of course, now just five years later as with anything related to the digital world, any trepidation for moving over from traditional photography seems so insignificant, so far removed.  Granted, the process of extracting a brilliant print from a celluloid strip will always have it's place in the heart of a photography purist.  But the benefits of today's computers with lenses attached, and the ease to manipulate the image after the fact has me hook, line and sinker.

The content in the following posts cover image-making from 2006 forward, excepting a few from previous eras that have been digitized and fall neatly within the selected categories.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

A hiatus and a re-birth

After moving from Minnesota to Arkansas and then Louisiana in the early 1990s, I almost lost touch with the spirit of photography.  Making a good living became my focus while the artistic part me took a back seat.  But after a six-year hiatus from the camera, I experienced a "re-birth" when I stumbled across a volume of Brett Weston';s photographs in 1998.  My image-making roots had been formed by the Black & Whites of Eugene Smith, Ansel Adams and Brett's father, Edward.  Seeing those dramatic images, so carefully crafted in highlights and shadows, I could only wish to feel again what I am sure the younger Weston felt when he made those photographs.

The camera came back out; the darkroom was set up again; and my artistic spirit came alive once more with the prospect of capturing more of those special, unique moments in time.  Over the next eight years I mixed some sporadic color work with a predominance of purist monochromatic film-based imagery until I begrudgingly gave in to the digital era.


Desert in the Caribbean, Aruba, 2003


Street corner, Key West, Florida, 2002

Bush Lake, Bloomington, Minnesota, 2002

Beach chairs, resort south of Cancun, Mexico, 2001


Shoreline, Duluth, Minnesota, 2001



Treeline at dawn, near Gull Lake, Minnesota, 1999


Stairway to heaven, Cancun, Mexico, 1998


Reflections of tree branches and sky, Shreveport, Louisiana, 1998