Tuesday, March 31, 2009

CREATIVITY

Henry David Thoreau once said, "the world is but a canvas to our imaginations". In these rather unsettled times, with economical collapse, world country unrest, excessive stimulus program uncertainty, we look for vision and creativity and above all guidance. Henry David Thoreau was a man of vision and in his various writings, namely CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE, he sought a better government. One of his most enigmatic quotes, ‘That government is best which governs not at all;’ and when men are prepared for it, that will be the kind of government which they will have.” I often wonder if our elected officials should heed. Or maybe his self imposed sabbatical of two years, two months and two days on Walden Pond would be a better respite for our President. Thoreau's ideologies and works influenced the likes of John F. Kennedy, Gandhi, Martin Luther King, and Tolstoy among a host of literary giants such as Hemingway, Yeats, and B.F. Skinner. And certainly Thoreau, being such an environmentalist and naturalist would be turning over in his grave to learn of global warming. Here's to Thoreau, a man of creativity and vision.


Monday, March 30, 2009

It's Sprung!! (Or to BEE or not to BEE)

Well, after a rather mild St. Louis summer (no really blistering, lingering heat filled days), a more than colorful autumn than years past, and another mild winter. It's sprung back!!! It's the glorious time of the year when the daffodils have awakened, the hyacinths are breathing forth their ever engaging bouquet, the dogwoods and red buds are once again clamoring for competition on who's beauty will shine forth. I'm not sure if Spring is my favorite time of the year. I do have to admit that there is an untold energy that "springs" (pardon the pun) forth, a renewed vigor in peoples' activities (not necessarily mine), and that distant calling from my yard that says, "rake me". I do anxiously await the first buds on my rose bushes and that intoxicating fragrance that comes from my floribundas. I've chosen a few spring pics that hopefully will awaken your energy, remind you to make a trip to your local hardware store for lawn and leaf bags, and make sure your lawn mower has clean gas.

I've also chosen a brief verse from Robert Louis Stevenson:

"Now the hedged meads renew Rustic odor, smiling hue, And the clean air shines and twinkles as the world goes wheeling though; And my heart springs up anew, Bright and confident and true. And my old love come to meet me in the dawning and the dew."





Sunday, March 29, 2009

"Oh Barn"!!!





I couldn't resist the opening line for this image. This old dilapidated barn sits just off Creve Couer Mill Rd. I've shot it many times at various times of the year and think it's a wonderful expose' of texture, shape, line and color. I shot it using High Dynamic Range. That "aurora borealis" looking glow you see off to the right of the barn in the sky isn't the Aurora Borealis, (much to my dismay) it's due to the image processing from the High Dynamic Range. I almost didn't get to process it using Photomatix Pro, my program wouldn't open and I thought I had somehow "trashed" it. Luckily I still had the zip file and was to open it and use it.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Textures



"It is foolish to pretend that one is fully recovered from a disappointed passion. Such wounds always leave a scar".
William Wadsworth Longfellow

Monday, March 23, 2009

Poems, Prayers, and Promises

Maroon Bells in Aspen Colorado On top of Independence Pass heading into Aspen, Co.

Lake Irwin in Crested Butte, Co.On Hwy 257 coming out of Cottonwood Pass, in Colorado.

I found myself TV surfing last night and came across a repeat of a PBS special on John Denver from 2005. Before I go any further, I wholeheartedly and without shame admit I was and still am to this day a huge John Denver fan. I know there have been a number of critics that assailed him and his music, citing a "pollyanna" image, an "aw shucks" frivolity to his personna. I truly believe that the world lost one of the great song writers and poets when he unfortunately died in a 1997 plane crash. And while there was a much "I can't believe it's true" mentality to his celebrated marriage to his first wife Annie, especially after they divorced......see I told you it was too good to be true, I identified with him in more ways than one. The title of this post I've aptly named after one of his (and could very well be my favorite)songs. I truly believe this was a man of true poetry and a unique connection not just into his soul but mine as well. The many songs he wrote, "Sunshine on My Shoulders", "Perhaps Love", "Rocky Mountain High" and "Annie's Song" all have such a poignancy for me. I can't tell you how many times I've been to Colorado but I will say that many of my most favorite times were shared with "Boom". "You fill up my senses, like a night in the forest, like a mountain in spring time, like a walk in the rain"..... John wrote those beloved words for Annie.
Here are several of my favorite images from some trips to Colorado. The first one is of the Maroon Bells in Aspen Colorado. The next one is on top of Independence Pass on the way into Aspen. The other from a trip to Crested Butte when Keller, Chloe, and Boom went camping in August and we hunkered into our bags (with Keller desperately trying to join me)to the sound of this "pinging" on the tent to wake up with nearly 8 inches of snow on the ground. The final is one of me with Keller and Chloe from the same trip but three days later. Who said the weather can change faster in St. Louis than Colorado??

Friday, March 20, 2009

A CLOSE ENCOUNTER??


You probably remember the movie, "Close Encounters of the Third Kind"? Another Steven Spielberg classic made in 1977 (gosh, was it really that long ago?). Whether you believe we are the only ones in this Solar System or espouse to the Jodie Foster character-Dr. Ellie Harroway-from "Contact" dictum, "it would seem to be a lot of wasted space", the image I've chosen today reflects on scene from "Close Encounters of the Third Kind when Roy and his wife are sitting above the hill waiting for the UFO's to come flying over the hill to prove his point. This particular image was not retouched in any way. See if you can determine what it is!!!

Monday, March 9, 2009

White Buildings and Blue Sky




I just took these pictures over the weekend. I was out looking for ways to compose and shoot images that I could manipulate to give the impression of motion, or fluidity and blur. Of all the aspects that photographers strive for, it's the perennial sharpest image we can muster. However, my current photo assignment for class is to do just the opposite....create an image that has a "ghost image" or is blurred. It's like telling noted chef Mario Battaligia to cook his pasta nice and soft as opposed to "al dente". Many of the Victorian photographers and even into the 20th century, blurred images began to surface as giving the feeling of instability and ambiguity. So, to settle my "angst" in having to complete the assignment, I had to present the simple image of the white buildings with the blue sky, less I start on a heavy dose of prolixin chased with some lexapro. Don't worry, it's not your eyes that are going bad and no matter how hard you squint, the image won't come in focus. It's not one of those trick pictures that after you've let your eyes "relax" you'll see a lamborghini with Halle Berry waving at you. But if you look hard enough, you will see several cars with their lights giving the impression of motion.
Enjoy