the artist's statement

"It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye" from THE LITTLE PRINCE. When people ask me "WHAT KIND OF ARTIST ARE YOU?"... I tell them, I am a painter ... they ask "OH oil or watercolor?".... I say, neither... I paint with light ... they give me a strange look.... IF I have the time and I think they are really interested, then I clarify... I use a camera and a scanner as a starting point, and then where it leads me I never know ... the end result may be a light capture from my scanner, or a manipulated photo, using many different computer enhancement tools including photoshop...... sometimes I create something that does not even look like anything recognizable. Then sometimes, I use mixed media.... mixing a printed inkjet picture with maybe a magazine transfer using wintergreen oil, or adding paint, or using sandpaper to rough it up ....in the end I have something original that never existed before.... just a splash of pixel dust.

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

foggy morning



Three different versions of a photo I took this past Spring up in the mountains of North Carolina ......

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

dandelion wind 2

another in my dandelion dreams series.... a fast shaking of the camera at slow speed and a fast F stop of some dandelion seed pods, with some post processing using Topaz filters, produced what you see here...... the method I used gives it a windy kind of feel I think .....

dandelion wind

part of my dandelion dreams series ...... this is actually a composite of some dandelion seed pods with deliberate movement of the camera at a 1second exposure at F32, and a another shot of some blue aster like flowers which also were taken with a very shaky camera at a slow speed and fast F stop.  I then  funked up using Topaz filters and Photoshop filters ......  after two hours of  trying different combinations, I hit on this one as a keeper...

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Stormy Night Ver.2

This is a more darker version of the Stormy Night

Stormy Night

A second in my Lady In The Window series.  I like the haunting feel of this piece.  I am not sure if the blue is not a bit too blue... too rich.... maybe I need to tone it down a bit.  For those who want to know how this was done - it is a collage of two photos I took.  One is actually an infrared captured using a trail cam of the woods around our cabin in the North Carolina mountains. The other is a photo I took of a beautiful woman looking out of a window somewhere on a farm in Belgium.  The collage was created in CS5 with some Topaz filtering.  The final addition was an acid edge added to give the final piece a more rugged look.  The tools used - CS5, Canon camera and lens, Bushnell trail cam, Auto FX, and Topaz.

Friday, June 24, 2011

the lady in the window

This is a composite of two photos.  One is a picture of a window at the  Abbey d'Orval  in Belgium.  The other is of a lady posing nude in front of a window at a small farm in Belgium. What you see in the background is a small church in a town near Namur Belgium.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Forgotten times in little Italy





This is a place called Little Italy, a part of an old steel mill town in Luxembourg, called Dudelange.  Today, Dudelange is no longer a steel town, and little Italy is now little Portugal.  In the 50's, the Italians made their homes here.  The men went to work in the steel mill or in the iron ore mines and the women tended their gardens and cooked noon dinners.  Today, a few Italians still call it home, but most have died, or moved into more modern homes somewhere else  and left to make room for the newer immigrants, the Portuguese.  The charm is still there but different. 

I took some photos this past October on a visit to my old town of my youth and decided to create some art with them.  This piece is actual a composite of a photo of the town, and a photo of an early morning reflection of sunlight on the Mexican tile floor in our Indian River home.  I spent a few hours doing  photoshop magic using Topaz software on both photos and combining them into the final piece.  The warm earthy tones of the piece conveys the rich colors of the iron ore that was pulled out of the ground for many years in the surrounding hills above Dudelange.  It also reminds me of the rusty dust that belched from the steel mill's chimneys that settled each day upon every window sill of every home in town.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

fantasy forest





One from my FANTASY FOREST series.  This one is again, an original from my trail cam.  As is usually the case, upon removing the cam, I end up moving the camera and I get some swirl effect.  With about an hour manipulating the picture using Topaz and photoshop art filters, and color changes, I came upon the final effect that I liked.  

FANTASY WATER

This was taken with my trail cam ( Bushnell ).  Early morning, as I removed the camera from the tree that I had attached it to the night before, the camera swung over some grass and the result was this green wave, like water in a creek running over rocks.  I cropped and changed the green to blue and voila - a cascade of water.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

the night forest

I took this with my trail cam one night up at our cabin in the mountains.  It is an infrared shot.  Then I did a bit of photoshop magic using Topaz mostly.  I like the noise that the camera added to the picture which gives it sort of an eerie feel to it. 

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

sacred nature stained glass

One of my favorite things to do when I am in Europe is to go see the beautiful stained glass windows that you find everywhere, in every country.  Recently I was inspired to create my own surreal abstract versions of stained glass using nature as the inspiration. In the fall of the year, before dusk, the woods up in the mountains of North Carolina have a stark and dark feel to them with their barren trees silhouetted  against the evening sky.  I love capturing the warm glow of the late afternoon sun as it peeks through the trees.  The red and orange glow and the black tree trunks remind me of stained glass windows.  With a bit of photoshop magic, I rendered the picture into a natural stained glass effect.  For this piece, I combined my stained glass creation with a picture I took at Orval in Belgium. 

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

nature's stained glass

The warm glow of the late afternoon sun peeks through a late autumn forest.  Using some photoshop magic, I created a surreal stained glass effect.  The trees become the lead, and the light becomes the glass.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

night visitors 1

I started out with a dark woods scene captured in late autumn.  Then I created a bunch of butterflies out of a picture I found on the net with the use of the cloning and transforming tools in photoshop CS2.  I then funked up my dark woods photo with some topaz filters and added water using Flaming Pears Flood filter.  Finally, I combined the butterflies and the woods.  The final piece can be interpreted in many ways, but my take on it is that the butterflies represents life, and the dark woods represent death.  With death comes new life.  White butterflies are, to me anyway, a symbol of a new beginning. 

Friday, January 21, 2011

Is photography art?

Is photography an art and especially is it fine art?   That question has been debated for 100 years now, and the answer is still very illusive today.  After researching the question on the net, and having read 100’s of answers, I think it is best to start with the question of, “What makes something ART”.

Lets think about someone who would be considered as an artist by just about anyone in the world.  Van Gogh, Cezanne, Monet, are a few that I can think of.  SO what makes these men, artists, and what makes their works, art? 

Each one of them, used tools - mostly brushes, and applied paint to a canvas.  Using their skill, their experience, their vision, and their imagination, they each, created paintings.  These paintings express their personal impressions of the subject.  We, the audience, each of us will perceive these works of art differently, but we all feel something that the artist put into the piece.  Emotions, feelings, and intuition, all play a part in our appreciation of the art.

Now when an artist uses a camera and software as his tools to create a piece of photo art, he is doing the same thing as  Van Gogh is doing.  Just different tools.  Now some may argue that Van Gogh created art by his skillful use of the brush and many hours of work in front on the canvas, and that the photo artist merely snapped a picture, and maybe did some manipulation using software, and he or she did not show any special skills in doing so.  First, the amount of time it takes to create a painting is not relevant.  Look at Picasso.  He took a canvas and painted a couple of curves and a few dots on it and in seconds, he had a finished piece.  Why is that art? It may have taken him seconds to create it, but it was his 20 years of honing his skills, that allowed him to create that piece of art.  Same thing with the camera artist.  He may have snapped the picture and took seconds or hours, to manipulate it in Photoshop to create his art piece, but again, just like Picasso, the long hours of learning how to use the tools, i.e. the camera and Photoshop, and very importantly, his or her imagination, is what allowed him or her to create the final work. 

Ansel Adams, as a result of many hours of observing nature, learning to use his camera, and learning the techniques of developing the negatives, he was able to see and feel the right moment and the right angle, to capture the picture.  In the darkroom, he continued the process and ultimately printed the picture.  His work is considered by many to be fine art.

In the final analysis, what makes it art, is not the length of time it took, or the tools used, but the skill and imagination of the artist, the ability to convey a feeling, to see with the heart.  It is the mastery of the process of arranging all the elements that result in creating something original. Something that brings out an aesthetic sensibility in us when we look at the art. 

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

beauty of decay -yellow daisy

One from my "Beauty of Decay" series.  This is "Yellow Daisy 1".  Again it is one of my scanography art pieces.  I had given my wife some Gerber Daisies for her birthday, and she was ready to toss them out after they had lived out their life as a bouquet.  She saw wilted flowers. I saw a beauty in the soft pedals that had fallen all around the vase - a wabi sabi moment. 

Saturday, December 18, 2010

the artist


This is a self portrait, that started out as a photo of me, at the medieval Knights Templar Commanderie de la Romagne, at Saint-Maurice sur Vingeanne, in France.   I gave the photo  a  painterly look and changed the modern pen into an old quill.  I also made my modern shirt look more medieval. 

Monday, December 13, 2010

shadows of medieval times


Late afternoon, the sun breaks thru the stained glass window, and paints a shadow  on the wall of the Cathédrale Saint-Étienne de Metz .......

Saturday, December 11, 2010

woods at dolphin rock abstract 1


.....one from my DOLPHIN ROCK series ..... there is a secret, mostly unknown place, in western North Carolina that has a rock formation, that looks like a dolphin jumping out of the water...... I was fortunate enough to have a friend show it to me ...... surrounding the dolphin, are a stand of birch trees that I captured in this still, and then I created a this painterly feel, using various techniques including different Topaz filters..... 

abstract yellow woods


one from my abstract series ..... it started out as a window reflection of the autumn woods, surrounding our cabin in the mountains of western North Carolina ..... funked it up, using various Topaz filters.........

reflections


in the cool mountains of western North Carolina, grows a pretty little plant called the spotted jewelweed... the flowers are less than one inch in size ..... an old Cherokee remedy for insect bites and poison ivy comes from the juice of its stems .....