Petunia and Nemesia, Balcony Garden, Hunter Hill, May 11, 2014

Petunia, Sunsatia Terra Cotta, Balcony Garden, Hunter Hill, May 11, 2014
Petunia, Sunsatia Terra Cotta, Balcony Garden, Hunter Hill, May 11, 2014
Petunia, Sunsatia Terra Cotta, Balcony Garden, Hunter Hill, May 11, 2014
Petunia, Sunsatia Terra Cotta, Balcony Garden, Hunter Hill, May 11, 2014
Nemesia, Balcony Garden, Hunter Hill, May 11, 2014
Nemesia, Balcony Garden, Hunter Hill, May 11, 2014
Nemesia, Balcony Garden, Hunter Hill, May 11, 2014
Nemesia, Balcony Garden, Hunter Hill, May 11, 2014

______

When has the photographer stepped up from snapshot to photograph?

I don’t have the definitive answer but believe that when the tripod has been set up, the business of recording has been slowed down and one may then make decisions about composition and depth-of-field somewhat different than one might if inclined to merely point and shoot with greater convenience.

As my several lives distract one another, especially my life online tangled up in global conflict, politics, and political psychology, I have found each grows its own little show.  The match here between artist, garden, Gitzo, and Nikon (D200, 16-85mm VR mounted with a circular polarizing filter on top) would seem about as convenient as photography may get: for everything else, including other gardens, one has to arrange a session or commit to travel, which is fine if the call comes to perform.

If the call doesn’t come, well, than one may do as budget and leisure allow or encourage.

With so many bins for leisure, photography, which I feel wants for visual adventure through travel, has over the past year or two taken some knocks.  It has had politics, online networking, music, books, and “journaling” with a fountain pen — definitely “unplugged” in the diary-keeping department — for competition.

So be it.

I’ve been given business cause to mobilize lamps, stands, tripods, and cameras this coming weekend, so here it is good to go over everything, from wires to light meters to lenses.

It feels good.

And the garden this spring seems yet a fine place for relaxing.

# # #

 

CA Continues to Photograph Fine Art

 

Acrylic on plywood, 18-inches x 4-feet, October 17, 2013.
“Add Water” by Gillian Lisette-Coubert, acrylic on plywood, 18-inches x 4-feet, October 17, 2013.

Communicating Arts continues photographing art by other artists.

“Gillian Lisette-Coubert”, whose name is a nom de brosse, has been a friend of Bill Roberts for some time, and I had promised as part of the work undertaken for him — his inventory in paintings mounts into the hundreds — that I would shoot a few works by Gillian as well.

"Rain Scape", Acrylic on plywood, 4-ft. x 3-ft., December 2013.
“Rain Scape” — Acrylic on plywood, 4-ft. x 3-ft., December 2013 – by Gillian Lisette-Coubert.

While I find “technical everything” somewhat unpleasant — where is my art!? — I’ve really come to enjoy both artists’ delight in color, depth, and texture as well as admire their ability to draw.  Both have demonstrated ability to draw to photo-realism standards were either so inclined.

"Crystal Silence - Gillian Lisette-Coubert - Acrylic on plywood, 2-ft. x 2-ft., July 27, 2013.
“Crystal Silence – by Gillian Lisette-Coubert – Acrylic on plywood, 2-ft. x 2-ft., July 27, 2013.

 

______

 

Painter Gillian Lisette-Coubert,  Hagerstown, Maryland, April 22, 2014.
Painter Gillian Lisette-Coubert, Hagerstown, Maryland, April 22, 2014.

 

# # #