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Archives for July 2013

July 30, 2013 by Kat

Losing Time

Hey, have you seen the month of July? I seem to have misplaced it. I know it is somewhere around here, in between two weeks of vacation and a new job at work and a “To Do” list a mile long. I just wish I could find July before it’s August. I don’t like losing time like this, discovering the summer days are getting shorter all of a sudden. On my hikes, I’m now out before the sun hits the hillsides and I watch it slowly illuminate the trees. It won’t be too much longer before I’m leaving the house in the dark. I’m not ready for that.

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Unfortunately, I recognize July is a lost month at this point, and it’s driving me nuts. I have this feeling of time rushing by without accomplishing anything for July. That’s not really true, of course. I’ve done a lot in July, I just haven’t had a lot of time to create new images of the type I want to create. And so I feel I haven’t accomplished anything. Silly, isn’t it, to measure myself against ONE aspect, when real life includes so many different aspects that come and go, ebb and flow.

So I’m trying to remember that as July slips away. And to figure out how to not lose August too!


A few bits and pieces to update you on…

Find Your Eye photo courses Button 150x150Registration is open for Find Your Eye: Journey of Fascination. It will run this fall from September 8 through October 11. I asked which Find Your Eye journey you wanted, and the most recent course, Journey of Fascination, was the overwhelming response. If you want to take an Instructor Led Find Your Eye course, don’t miss this opportunity. With my shift to On Demand courses, it may be a while before this one is offered as Instructor Led again. Register here.

Smartphone-Art-Button-125x125The Smartphone Art workshop here in Corvallis is coming up soon on August 10. I’m so excited about this workshop! The course materials are coming together wonderfully and we are going to have a good time. My only worry is that there is too much material for the one day course, and making sure I fit in the important bits to get everyone to where they can enjoy this fun process. The course is filling up, but there are still a few spaces available. Register here.

20130730-072251.jpgYou can now get this blog via email! Look for the orange sign up box at the top of the blog sidebar. If you can’t get over to check every day, this will help you keep in touch. You don’t have to worry about being overwhelmed with emails — I’ll be creating new posts no more than 2 or 3 times a week going forward. You can also sign up for the Kat Eye News, which includes a “Best of the Blog” roundup via the monthly email.

PHC-2013-button-125x125The July Photo-Heart Connection link up is opening in just two days on August 1. Be sure to plan some time to participate this month. Knowing this is coming up is contributing to my feeling of lost time… I haven’t even had a chance to visit last month’s participants, so how can it be time again? But I’m hopeful a review of July’s photos will help me put my creative accomplishments in a different light. See you Thursday!

See, I tell myself, you have done a lot in July!

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: Corvallis, forest, time

July 25, 2013 by Kat

Dear Winter Trees

It’s been a while since I’ve seen you, and I wanted to let you know that you are on my mind. I’ve been missing your interesting shapes against the sky. I find myself seeing glimpses of you in your summer cousins. You know, the ones with fewer leaves? I see you in their branches and shadows. And I miss you more.

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Don’t get me wrong, I love summer and don’t want to hasten its end. I love the long days of light, the heat, the fresh fruits and vegetables, running around with bare feet, wearing sunglasses and crop pants, and no homework. There is too much good in summer to hurry it along.

But the summer trees? Not as interesting as you. All their best features are hidden by their summer finery of leaves.

So know that when the time comes for you to return, at least one person will be rejoicing. I’ll be excited to see you this fall, with my camera in hand. I already have big plans for us.

Yours,
Kat


My latest article, Smartphone Art 2: Improve your images with basic editing, is up on the Seek Your Course blog now. Stop on over to get an overview of basic photo editing, selective adjustments, and how to find and choose apps. Let me know what you think!

What else do you want to learn? I’m prepping for my Smartphone Art workshop here in Oregon in a couple of weeks and starting to think about an online class. Now is the perfect time to let me know what you want to learn. Where are you having trouble? What makes you say, How did she do that? Drop me a note.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: Corvallis, shadow, smartphone art, summer, tree, winter

July 22, 2013 by Kat

Playing Tourist

I’m wrapping up Chicago today, with a few fun images of us playing tourist. Our primary purpose of the trip was to visit family in Wisconsin, so Chicago was the vacation we added on with just the three of us. It’s always fun to visit a big city with lots to explore, and we managed to see and do a few things.

Hanging out over the city, at the Willis (Sears) Tower…
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Catching light at the Museum of Science and Industry…
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Bumping into astronauts at the Adler Planetarium…
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Riding the trains…
20130722-093047.jpg(Vacation is one of the few times my son lets me photograph him. I think this one is a keeper!)

Watching the whales at the Shedd Aquarium…
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Rubbing elbows with Sue at the Field Museum…
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And walking, walking, walking daily through Millennium Park, occasionally squeezing in a family photo…
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Bye, bye Chicago! Thanks for a fun time.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: Chicago, family, Illinois, museum, tourist

July 19, 2013 by Kat

Seeking Artistic Inspiration

One of the best things we can do for our own artistic development is to view the work of other artists. Viewing the art in books or online is ok, but seeing a body of work in person, life-size, as intended to be viewed is a much stronger experience. It’s immersive. You don’t just “see” the art intellectually. You feel it, you become part of it. And you discover new things about yourself as an artist.

So I was excited to be in Chicago for a few days, a big city with lots of art opportunities. I didn’t see as much art as I might have liked to… It’s always a balance when traveling with the family. I don’t want to go off by myself too much, but I want to have a little time for this experience I love so much. I managed to sneak in a few different visits, and made a couple of discoveries I’ll share with you today.

Abelardo Morell

I had a couple of hours to spend at the Art Institute of Chicago, and was lucky enough to see the special photography exhibition, Abelardo Morell: The Universe Next Door.

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I’ve seen Morell’s camera obscura work in a couple of magazines and have looked at his website before. I love the juxtaposition of the outside world onto the inside. It was very cool to see the progression of this work from the early black and white with the upside down projections, through his transition to color, and more recently the tent work, where he projects images on to the ground. The combination of landscape image and ground texture is fascinating to me.

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But what was even more interesting was the depth and breadth of his other bodies of work included in the exhibition, and how they all captivated and delighted me. He has a wonderful way of seeing interesting things in the every day. His ability to see and present the most mundane things in a surprising way is an example of what photography can be, at its best. Sometimes I feel a little jaded with photography, as if everything has already been photographed a thousand times over. Morell’s work reminded me that there is always a fresh way to look at things, and we can cultivate and develop our own unique perspective, even in the deluge of photographs shared every day. It is something I strive for.

I was so inspired by his work, I bought the exhibition catalog and I will be poring over it now that I’m home. You can visit Morell’s website here and the exhibition website here.

Louis Comfort Tiffany

Navy Pier, as one of the main tourist spots in Chicago, was disappointing. My impressions were nothing but heat, tourists, and an exorbitant $18 price tag for our family to have ice cream. I had read about the free Smith Museum of Stained Glass Windows, and we found this fantastic display inside as we searched for relief from the heat. It completely redeemed our visit to Navy Pier.

Most of the stained glass I’ve seen is in churches and cathedrals, and with the exception of a couple of places with more abstract designs, it’s been less than interesting to me as an art form. This museum transformed my thinking on stained glass, with the discovery of the work of Louis Comfort Tiffany.

Of course I’ve heard of Tiffany lamps before, but they’ve never really caught my eye. But did you know that he did incredible landscape windows?

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They were amazing. The colors, the depth, the feelings he could evoke, all surprised me. I fell in love with his work.

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This man was a genius with glass. He developed an amazing array of techniques to create different effects with the glass.

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We think of photography as the art of capturing light, but stained glass is an art of capturing light in a completely different way. (Kim, these poppies made me think of you!)

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I was inspired by Tiffany’s use of color and simple shapes to convey a complex scene. I’d love to develop a way to create images that evoke a similar look and feel.

Who knew that a cruise through this little museum to beat the tourists and the heat would yield so much creative inspiration? You can find more on the museum here and on Tiffany’s work here.

Frank Lloyd Wright

I fell in love with Frank Lloyd Wright’s architecture when I first visited the Gordon House here in Oregon a number of years ago. Architecture, even more than 2D art, is something you need to physically see and experience to understand. I wasn’t impressed with anything when looking at the outside of Wright’s Gordon House, but the inside! Wow! I finally understood what all of the fuss was about.

So having the opportunity to see another of Wright’s houses while in Chicago was something I couldn’t pass up. I visited and toured the Robie House, in Hyde Park.

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It was great to learn more about Wright’s history, and to see another of his styles of architecture. Robie House is considered one of the ultimate examples of his Prairie House style, intended to give a feeling of the spaciousness of the prairie in the urban environment.

I love Wright’s use of space and attention to detail, everything down to the fixtures and furniture. The patterns and designs he created for each building appeal to my sense of order. There is always a wonderful repetition of motif in his work, like this leaded window pattern.

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We couldn’t take photographs inside the house, but it was great to be inside, to see and feel the spaces. It was also great to compare the Prairie House style of Robie House with the Usonian House style of the Gordon House, and to discover I liked the Gordon House better. In thinking through why, I learn more about myself and my preferences. It’s all good artistic inspiration.

You can learn more about Frank Lloyd Wright here, the Robie House here and the Gordon House here.

While I didn’t get to explore art in Chicago as much as I would have liked to, I think I brought home some fantastic inspiration and discoveries that will stay with me. It doesn’t take a lot of time to be inspired by other artists, but the benefits are long-lasting.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: Abelardo Morell, art museum, Chicago, Frank Lloyd Wright, Illinois, inspiration, Louis Comfort Tiffany

July 18, 2013 by Kat

A Different View of Chicago

This trip was an experiment. For the first time ever while traveling, I left the dSLR at home and just took the iPhone. Lately, even when I bring the “big” camera along, I don’t use it. Or if I do use it, I don’t do anything with the photographs. I wanted to find out if I would miss having the “big” camera with me on a longer trip.

The verdict? Nope, I didn’t miss it. I didn’t miss carrying around the weight. And surprisingly, I didn’t miss the expectation that I was supposed to take a certain kind of picture that seems to stick in my head when I carry the dSLR. I just captured what caught my eye as we went along. I took a lot fewer photographs, and of very different things, than when I visited Chicago almost two years ago. Part of it is due to the equipment I didn’t carry, but part of it is due to my changing interests and eye. It all plays together.

Here are a few of the things that captured my interest as we walked around…

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A different view, huh?

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: Chicago, Illinois, Mobile

July 17, 2013 by Kat

Back to Life

Recognize this skyline? I’ll give you a minute to look at it closely…

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Off to the left is the Willis Tower (formerly Sears Tower). You might recognize a few other building profiles. In the front is Lake Michigan. Got it yet?

Here’s another clue…

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A city trapped in the reflection of the Cloud Gate, aka The Bean in Millenium Park. Now do you know it?

It’s Chicago.

Yeah, we just got back from a couple of weeks away from home in Chicago and various parts of Wisconsin. Chicago was a side trip, a short family vacation with just the three of us before we headed to Wisconsin for family visits and reunions. A time for taking a stroll down memory lane while making some new memories. Explaining to my son who everyone was and how they were related to us… over and over and over again. His head is swimming with first cousins once-removed, second cousins, great aunts and uncles. (To be honest, my head is swimming a bit too.)

So here I am this morning, back at home and trying to figure out where to start. Where and how I want to dive back to real life. We’ve got the dog to pick up from the kennel and library books to return. Shopping to do and mail to sort through. Oh yeah, and work, I have to be there today too.

I decided to start with laundry, and downloading my photos. You can’t go wrong with either of those. And saying hi here… I’m back! I missed you all! I’ll share more with you soon.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: Chicago, cityscape, Illinois, reflection, skyline, vacation

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