MW Fine Art Photography
  • Inspiration
  • July6th

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    When I was about 9 I think that most of my life was wrapped-up in playing baseball and the most responsibility that I had was making sure that my paper route was done by 5pm on weekdays – 8am on the weekends. Getting every paper delivered by 8am on weekends was actually like my warm-up for baseball which usually started at 8, 9 or 10 am. Dad was always there with me, arriving a good 30 minutes early most of the time to stretch and warm-up.

    Flashback: I have always had a mild amusement with the camera and the fact that one could take a moment in time and put it into a single stand-still image. My Grandmother worked in a Portrait Studio when I was just a little guy and I remember days when we would get to visit Grandma at work. I don’t remember being as interested in the ‘gear’ at the studio at the time, just was more thrilled to be with Grandma at the studio. I grew-up around cameras, my dad always had a still camera with him as well as a video camera. His still camera was an old rangefinder that was larger and clunkier than all the other cameras that I usually saw moms and dads have. I loved that dad’s camera was all manual and that he had control over what he was capturing. Of course I didn’t know what all the controls did or what/why he was setting those controls, but it always pulled my attention when ever it was taken out for a picture. Plus is was made from metal, not plastic like all the others. I even remember the sound of the flash as it powered up.

    I guess it would be safe to say that sometime, as young minds always do, I would get sidetrack during the games and start looking for Dad and where he was. Looking to find the perspective that Dad had taken to capture the game from. I would always notice the “guys with big cameras” at my older siblings high school sports events. I would always watch their every move closer than I would watch the game. I especially liked watching them frantically re-load film in the middle of an intense basketball game, something that less and less photographers can relate to anymore. I didn’t know it at the time, but looking back at it now, I feel that I had a glimpse of my calling. Something that we all have in life. Problem being that we usually do not know that it is happening at the time.

    Just think, the camera hadn’t even entered my life and I had little idea about what a camera does except make a lot of people grumpy when they have to stand in front of it. The ‘Camera’ also made some of the moms run like lighting back to their car to get it, trying not to miss a landmark moment in their child’s life or that team photo that we all look back at years down the road.

    When I sit and seriously think about what it is that I currently do for a living I cannot help but think, wow. I am basically what I wanted to be when I was 9, but I didn’t know it then. Just a thank-you to everyone along the way that has supported me, inspired me, and increased my knowledge base in photography.

  • June16th

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    First off, I have to let you know that this is the longest YouTube video that I have ever watched (2 hours). Chase must have an inside connection at YouTube HQ to be able to get away with an upload of that size!

    How to approach watching this video: I first had full intentions of watching this start to end without any disruptions. Well, we all know when you’re on-line how hard that is. I ended up breaking this into three viewing sessions, works well with my ADD if you know what I mean. I do dislike taking RAW content from one blog and posting to mine, but this IS RAW. Great quality content that if taken to heart will transform the way that you are approaching your creative photography and wondering where to take the next step. Take a “few” minutes and watch this till the end, it doesn’t get much better than this until Joe McNally comes out with The Hot Shoe Diaries II.

    Take a moment to share a few comments about the video and how your passion has kept you going.

  • May23rd

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    Photography to me holds a significant power to help others. This time, The Boys and Girls Club of Green Bay. These are the start of a new little project that I will be working on with a friend at the club. The thought behind this is to show that The Boys and Girls Club is not just a place where kids hang out, it’s a place that helps school age youth make better choices and reach their full potential in a safe and accepting environment. It teaches all young people, regardless of background or circumstances to be equipped to respect others and make our community a better place to live.

    Did you know that they are currently serving over 8,300 children in the Green Bay community!

    It’s not only a place to just hang out, it’s a place to build friendships, a place to learn technology, explore different mediums of art, learn how to play an instrument, develop self-discipline and leadership sills, gain the trust of others and develop lasting lifelong skills.

    I had that opportunity to make a few pictures of Kareem in the weight room. Pretty big and intimidating guy. It’s not always easy asking a guy of his stature if I can take a few pictures of him. Kareem gave me the OK and away we went.

    Did some really tough photos of him lifting and expressionless, but at the end we all had really good time and I managed to capture a shot that shows Kareem’s real personality.

    More to come….MW

  • April25th

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    Spending the morning looking through some of the archives and came across this picture of me that was taken in March 2009 on Mt. Lemmon, AZ. It inspired me. We are so small to this world around us and yet, at times, we are so oblivious of our surroundings. How often do we take a minute of our day and think about how great and inspiring the world is around us [the present actual world, not cyber world]. All we have to do is let it in. No texting needed. No technology needed. No talking even needed. Just sit back and enjoy, nature is free, enlightening, and greatly inspiring if you let it.

    Get those feet muddy and get some dirt under those fingernails. Better yet, get that camera shutter clicking and make yourself a better photographer by capturing the world around you. With a camera you are the story telling, everyone that looks at your pictures will be looking at your point-of-view. You are the artist/author. Your opinion of how you framed it, how you composed it, how you over/under exposed it. Your pictures are you. So instead of reading those RSS feeds on your computer/smartphone or waiting for that next juicy status update on facebook today, go make some pictures!

    Now to the good stuff:

    • My first dose of inspiration, not only for you, but also for myself is a photographer with such a great concept that I rank it highly among all projects that I have seem. Clark Vandergrift has put together quite the collection titled, “Tree People” Not only is the body painting done exquisitely, by Master bodypainter Jen Seidel, they way that Clark has implemented them into the composition of the photographs is masterful! Very well planned and executed project. Well worth a click of your mouse.
    • 500 photographers is a weblog that posts 5 active photographers a week for 100 weeks. The photographers can be from any discipline within the photographic range, but they have to be worth looking at and have a certain level of quality. My favorite so far.
    • Joe McNally‘s assistant, Drew Gurian just launched a new, very clean designed web site to display his work. It is always great to view the work of a professional’s assistant, in this case, the assistant to one of the very best.
    • A few weeks ago I had that awesome experience to photograph hang-out, talkin’ smack and making a few pics of these six guys known as Stepwise.

    Well, I hope this offers you a bit of inspiration and perhaps a few pictures that you haven’t ever looked at before. I look forward to hearing what you have to say.

  • March20th

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    Digging deeper and deeper into the history of photography I love when I find something that really impacts and motivates. [Enter Richard Avedon] Today it is kind of a “guest blog” when I think about it. I’ll keep it to that and leave you with the essay that Avedon wrote about his “photo opportunity” with Henry Kissinger.

    I once went to Washington for what they call a “photo opportunity” with Henry Kissinger. As I led him to the camera, he said a puzzling thing. He said, “Be kind to me.” I wish there had been time to ask him exactly what he meant, although it’s probably clear. Now, Kissinger knows a lot about manipulation, so to hear his concern about being manipulated really made me think. What did he mean? What does it really mean to “be kind” in a photograph? Did Kissinger want to look wiser, warmer, more sincere than he suspected he was? Do photographic portraits have different responsibilities to the sitter than portraits in paint or prose? Isn’t it trivializing and demeaning to make someone look wise, noble (which is easy to do), or even conventionally beautiful when the thing itself is so much more complicated, contradictory, and therefore fascinating? Was he hoping that the photograph would reveal a perfect surface? Or is it just possible that he could have wished – as I would have if I were being photographed – that “being kind” would involve allowing something more complicated about me to burn through: my anger, ineptitude, strength, vanity, my isolation. If all these things are aspects of character, would I not, as an artist, be unkind to treat Kissinger as a merely noble face? Does the perfect surface have anything to do with the artistic integrity of a portrait?

    A photographic portrait is a picture of someone who knows he’s being photographed, and what he does with this knowledge is as much a part of the photograph as what he’s wearing or how he looks. He’s implicated in what’s happening, and he has a certain real power over the result. The way someone who’s being photographed presents himself to the camera and the effect of the photographer’s response on that presence is what the making of a portrait is about. The philosopher Roland Barthes once said a very wise thing about photography. He said, “Photography is a captive of two intolerable alibis. On the one hand, ‘ennobled art pictures.’ On the other hand, ‘reportage’ which derives its prestige from the object. Neither conception is entirely correct.” He said, “Photography is a Text, a complex meditation on meaning.”

    What Barthes recognized is that we need a new vocabulary to talk about photography. Not “art” versus “reality,” “artifice” versus “candor,” “subjective” versus “objective” – photography falls in between these classifications, and that’s why it’s so impossible to answer questions like “Is photography really art?” and “Is this an accurate picture of your friend?” As I have said on other occasions, “All photographs are accurate. None is the truth.”

    I don’t think pictures have to justify their existence by calling themselves works of art or photographic portraits. They are memories of a man; they are contradictory facets of an instant of his life as a subject – and of our lives as viewers. They are, as Barthes said, texts, and as such they exist to be read, interpreted, and argued over – not categorized and judged.

    So who is Henry Kissinger? And what, or who, is this photograph? Is it just a shadow representation of a man? Or is it closer to a doppelgänger, a likeness with its own life, an inexact twin whose afterlife may overcome and replace the original?

    When I see my pictures in a museum and watch the way people look at my pictures, and then turn to the pictures myself and see how alive the images are, they seem to have little to do with me. They have a life of their own. Like the actors in Pirandello, or in Woody Allen’s movie The Purple Rose of Cairo, when the actors leave the screen and join the audience. They have confrontations with the viewers Photography is completely different from every other form of art. I don’t really remember the day when I stood behind my camera with Henry Kissinger on the other side. I’m sure he doesn’t remember it either. But this photograph is here now to prove that no amount of kindness on my part could make this photograph mean exactly what he – or even I – wanted it to mean. It’s a reminder of the wonder and terror that is a photograph.