MW Fine Art Photography
  • fine art
  • May29th

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    It’s that time again, I recently had some huge prints made up and have them on display at Luna Cafe in De Pere, WI. For a more clear picture, head on down to Luna to check them out.

    All prints are 40″ x 60″ and would love to have a new home. Let me add that transporting these things was a bit of a puzzle due to the size, but I will gladly transport them to wherever you would need them to get to.

    I would also like to extend a thank you to Craig Johnson and my dear Maggie for showing up at the crack of dawn to help hang these. Craig is a photograph himself and does some really jaw-dropping HDR’s. Please click over to his work and take a few minutes to look at his work.

    And the the final new esthetic in Luna looks like this.

  • May1st

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    Photography to me started when I was as little as I can remember back, my dad would always have a camera and a video camera at just about every single thing that we did and went to. I won’t get too much into video because I was not called into that area. My calling/passion is in the still world, a picture. One at a time, several a day, millions in my lifetime. I capture images because that is what makes me, me. My goal in these “What Photography is to Me” blog posts is gain a better understanding and awareness of what pictures mean, along with giving you an inside scoop as to how and why I create the images that I do.

    I wish I had a few of those old childhood pictures to share with you, but seeing that at this moment I don’t have any I will have to share at a later date. I do want to talk a bit about a few pictures that I do have. I know that you will form your own idea/opinion of each image. Good. That is what this is all about. I would love to hear what you see in the images. What story do you have to tell? What story are you reading? How this image makes you feel? Photography is not only capturing images, but also viewing and reading images. The feelings, emotions and reaction that the image brings to you, the viewer. (See my A Richard Avedon Essay Post for more on this.)

    Anyone who has ever been to Las Vegas has passed at least one person spending their day doing this. “Merry Christmas & a happy new year. Very grateful for ANYTHING. Thanks GOD BLESS” is what his note to by-passers states. Why did I take this picture? Why not? I mean, this picture is going to make a connection with about 97% of the people that look at it. Some may say “Oh look at that bum” or “Everyone takes that picture, there’s nothing special about it.” I took this picture because that’s what I do, take pictures. Not in the thinking that this is a special picture and that it should be given an award, but more that it has made a connection to a very high percentage of it’s viewers.

    It is not necessarily a picture that anyone would buy, or even pass on a link to their friends, but think of the thoughts, life stories, and tales that are instantly brought to mind by viewing it. You could talk about his self-esteem, his clothing, his note, red cup (does the red cup get noticed more than a blue cup), his jeans (no holes, and there is not a single spot of dirt on them), the hat, scarff….. the list is pretty long. I took this picture because I wanted to, he’s a guy that is ‘different’ in society, and yet has celebrity status. Let me hear your story.

    On to another picture.

    Walking along noticing this beautiful (or ugly pending on your take of stained glass) piece above me forced me to take a picture. The first result, more of a reaction photo to what I was seeing. I really didn’t think about this any further than just a good exposure. I liked the two right corners just having a touch of the darker outer-circle and by putting them right there it moved the center of the piece just enough off center. Recomposing, I captured the picture below, which I have a better liking for. It mainly just keep my interest for a much longer amount of time and I feel much more visually comfortable, a visual zen one may say, viewing it.

    Obviously, this is a subjective comment. It is what I see and feel when viewing. But photography to me is not only how I see, but what everyone else sees and feels as well. I really try hard to make images that make people think. Some stories, some ideas, some others have had more a personal connection because of a pervious happening in their lifetime. There is a connection from my image to the viewers eyes that provokes though process. Sometimes in a more direct way and others in a less, but the connection was made. I look forward to hearing your stories, thoughts and ideas.

  • April7th

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    Been thinking spring lately with the weather changing and the grass getting greener. Warmer weather means better shooting conditions and less ‘dead’ looking landscapes. I think everyone enjoys a life-filled photograph, but I can relate to the lack-of-life. My latest project that I have started includes pieces of life that are now……lacking life as one may put it. They have been passed along and are now out of one’s life. Right out the window that is; on the side of the road. Some of these objects as I walked by them could make one flashback to it’s previous life to see what and who was doing with it. One in particular is the beautifully mangled badminton racquet. When I stumbled upon this particular piece, I could see a child playing in their backyard on a sunny summer afternoon. Laughing and having a wonderful time, making memories. Enjoying life.


    The whole concept behind this project is to think of each piece at text. Take some time and read each one. They all have a story. A story that is as wonderful or as simple as you want it. I’m going to be adding to this project throughout the summer and into the fall for an entire year. The entire collection will be available in a hard-cover book when complete.


  • November29th

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    With the season just about fully transitioned to winter here in Wisconsin, minus the two feet of snow, the temperature has changed and the cold now chills one to the bone. Waiting for the snow to stick is what gets to me the most. After all, what is cold weather without snow? Everything is so gray and dull that I find myself struggling with my personal work in the midst of an unforgiving seasonal change.

    I love the outdoors and Door County had another sensational fall that helped capture some of my best images to date. Full of beautiful colors and tourists as always, Door County could and will go down in my book as one of my favorite places in Wisconsin to photograph, and just to be. So being cooped up indoors for the mean time I have started to expand on my “Uniquely Complicated” series. Above is the first of the expansion. Look forward for more of these to come. I love the complicatedness of these images as the two substances mold and meld together with a simplicity that’s so complex as the same time. I also love the purity of a single color among and against the simple white background with subtle gray tones framing in the complexity.