Showing posts with label photgraphy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photgraphy. Show all posts

Monday, August 2, 2010

Summer Camp (Say Less, Create More! & August Break)

visit Susannah Conway for details and a list of participants



Looks like all the campers are settled in with trunks unpacked and cameras ready for Susannah's August Break blogger camp. I am setting the intention for myself that this month be a time when I say less and create more. So while I may (note the use of the word may) be writing less, that does not mean I will not be sharing the fruits of my creative retreat with you here. In fact, Wednesday's post has a little treat I had a lot of fun creating, so be sure to check back. Do feel free to leave just a smiley face, heart or hi and let me know how you are enjoying the second half of the summer.

So here is my impression from day one at camp:





There is no secret ingredient,
you don't have to [add anything],
to make something special
you just have to believe it's special.

(A little wisdom from Kung Fu Panda ... Cowgirl was with me at work today and I was treated to multiple listenings.)

There is still room at camp ... want to join me? I would consider swapping bunks for a little chocolate.

Monday, April 19, 2010

Spring days (Best Shot Monday)



I needed one of those days that just unfolds ...

without much planning and with little fuss ...
open to receiving the quiet gifts that each moment offers ...
experienced outside of time ...
the whole day whispering "listen ..."
and me pausing long enough to hear.


A visual record of a Perfect Day:


Started off with early morning walk while the neighborhood was quiet:




except for the birds who provided a lovely soundtrack:



back home, a hot cup of good, strong coffee:


and I was ready for the day. Throwing the usual plans out the window, Cowgirl and I packed our backpacks with snacks, water, pads and pencils and headed off to the botanical garden. Paying little attention to time, we walked, told stories, discovered tiny miracles and took loads of pictures. The shot I do not have is of us sitting on the ground, my camera strap around both our necks and me holding the camera while she had her turn taking pictures. Oh, she is ready for her own camera!

some of the loveliness we saw:
























after much strolling and picture taking, we found a shady spot to rest and eat our snacks:












Tired but contended, we made our way back to the car.





it was, to borrow a favorite line of poetry,

"... a day from a book, steeped in its own warm juice,

heavy with the smells of growing ..."

(Alastair Reid, Weathering: Poems & Translations)





How would your perfect day unfold?

Monday, April 12, 2010

Weekly Reflection (week 15): Wanting to thank you



Who do I wish I could thank from my past? (Who might not realize their impact upon my life?)



I am always awed when reflecting upon the course of my life to consider those seemingly haphazard moments shared with another person, possibly a stranger, that sparked a monumental change in my life. At the time, I am not aware that my course has shifted and that the steps I am somewhat haltingly taking will result in such a rich journey.

I've been thinking about all the people in my past who have bumped shoulders up against me and sent me off in new directions. I've written before about the conversation over tea that turned out to be the seed for my journey to Cowgirl. The job I hold now is due to a conversation with a customer when I worked at a bookstore. Somehow, the fact I had a master's degree in Art History and had taught before came up and months later a phone call came in to the store and someone I did not even remember was asking me if I wanted to teach a class at the university here.

But there is one person who has been floating through my awareness a lot these days. The one person who I wish I could thank right now for his impact upon my life is my high school photography teacher. His was more than a casual bumping into and I doubt he ever knew how essential his belief in me was then and even now.




High School was not a good time for me. My memory of it is steeped in the emotions of survival. I was pretty shy, I started out overweight and then struggled with an eating disorder for the remainder of my time there. I did not belong to any clubs, I partook of no extracurricular activities. In fact, I spend my afternoons working at the public library. The librarians there and the women in an aerobics class at the YMCA that my mother and I attended compromised the bulk of my social interactions. Oh, I hung out with friends my age but my sense is we all were just drifting through our days until we could be released into the next phase of our lives.

Somehow, I gathered up enough courage to take the one class I had always wanted to take: photography. Our school only offered black and white photography, levels I and II, and I took both. I loved everything about it. The chemicals that stained my finger tips and corduroy pants, marking me as an initiate; the lazy spin of the lab clock marking time for the developing and fixing trays; the hum of the lights when exposing a print; tapping the bottle opener on the counter to let the person next to you in the dark know it was their turn to open up their film canister. I think I loved working in the darkroom because I could feel alone while surrounded by others. There was a sacred quality to our working there together, each person focused upon their images, coaxing their perception of the world into tangible form.

Of course what made this space sacred and empowering was the instructor, Mr. Perna. In hindsight, it seems many of the teachers in my school were disappointed. There were standouts who loved both the material and the teaching of their subject, but many more seemed disappointed by either where they ended up, what they were doing or by us, the students. I don't believe we knew that at the time, but we could sensed their disillusionment the way a dog picks up on meanness. In turn, they made us uneasy and uncomfortable with where and who we were.

By contrast, Mr. Perna seemed to genuinely enjoy both photography and the teaching of it to us. I loved the times he would pull out a slide projector and show us the works of the great photographers like Stieglitz, Adams, Weston, Strand and Lange. One weekend my mother and I ran into Mr. Perna and his wife at an exhibition of Ansel Adams photographs in New York. My sense is we were both pleased to recognize the other one shared a passion for the image.

After taking both of the black and white photography classes, the only other course one could take was an independent or "advanced" study which was limited to one student per semester. It never even occurred to me to try for that coveted solo spot and probably Mr. Perna knew I would not ask. So he asked me.

Not only did he ask if I was interested, but he confided that he was asking me before another student approached him as he would rather work with me. If he did nothing else, this expression of his confidence in me opened up the possibility that maybe, just maybe there was something in me that was worthy of his belief. But he also taught me to respect my vision and taste, and to stand up for my point of view. One time while discussing one of my images he expressed his preference for a lighter exposure, but deferred to what he had observed was my preference for darker images. He never treated me as a kid with a lot to learn; rather, he treated me as an equal whose ideas and aesthetic were worth considering. In respecting me as someone with something worthwhile to say, he mentored me in learning to respect myself.




I wish I could say I carried forward his confidence and conviction in my talent. I fell back into old habits of disbelief and after I took a college photography course, I put my camera away except for holiday photographs. My cameras languished more or less unloved until last year. Thankfully I stumbled into other teachers whose passion for photography and the healing effect of turning the camera lens upon one's life is rekindling that little flame sparked by Mr. Perna so many years ago. I know I am bolder today because of the foundation he helped me create way back when I was still a vulnerable caterpillar, incredulous that wings or color or freedom could be part of my story.




So a very humble "thank you" to Mr. Perna for believing in me when I didn't know how to do so for myself. I can't say I've tried very hard to find him; probably if I caved in and joined Facebook I might be able to track him down. And yes, I do know his first name, Paul (and his wife was Susan) but he is frozen in my memory as "Mister." And it seems fitting to combine this thank you with photographs from my past weekend as my contribution to Best Shot Monday.

I know the very best way I can show my gratitude for his gifts is to continue to believe in myself and to nurture that attitude within others. We often never know how a smile to a stranger brightened their day but we do know the impact of those acts upon our hearts and our spirit. I will also keep taking pictures for they help me to remember to see and honor myself and they capture the magic that is my life unfolding as a woman, a mother, and an artist.





How will you keep the gratitude wheel turning? Who do you wish you could thank?


Monday, April 5, 2010

Weekend moments



It was a lovely Easter weekend spent at the zoo with some friends ...




Coloring Easter eggs ...




and hunting for some more ...




and enjoying the bounty of the day ...





And even finding a spare moment to try a new project ...

Easy Peasy fabric flower ... directions found here


Hope you had a shining day (or night!)