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July 27, 2016 by Kat

An Abstract Question

Ok, I’ll admit it, I’m stuck.

This #30edits abstract project I was so excited about is kicking my butt. I haven’t created a new one in almost a week, and I’m not really motivated to get back into it. Here’s the last…


So what is it that is leaving me flat about the whole thing?

Sure, it’s fun. It’s been good to see where each individual piece goes. But it feels like there is no purpose, no cohesiveness to the whole group of work. They are a series of individual pieces that don’t really relate to each other. And so far, they are not pushing me to much out of my comfort zone.

I’ve realized a few things lately, as I’ve worked through this project… 

Since I’ve sat with my art for several weekends at art fairs, I’ve realized that there is something those winter trees give me, besides inspiration. They give me a cohesiveness to my work which is otherwise very disparate in style. Even in my last #30edits project, which resulted in vastly different pieces, they related to each other since they started with the same photograph. That creates a connection between the work at least in my own mind. A connection I can talk about with others. These abstracts have no relation to each other. For some reason that bugs me.

Maybe that bugs me because it feels that they have no story on their own. The only story in them is the processing itself, the project itself. Even though what I love about abstract art is the emotion of it, it doesn’t feel that there is an emotional driving force in the creation of them. They are interesting, but when they are done, they aren’t conveying something more to me, something inside of me, in the way my art does usually. I decided I don’t want to share the starting photograph of these, because it ruins the magic of the abstract. But maybe it also ruins the magic of creation in a way, that there is no clear tie to the starting photograph, which is usually so important to my process. You can’t tell that it started as this one thing and was transformed into something new but related.

So I’m trying to decide… Do I continue the #30edits Abstract project or do I stop? Will I find inspiration if I push through this stuck place? Or have I learned my lesson and I should focus on the thing that has given me some inspiration lately… The figure?


Trying to decide. And in the meantime, I’m barely creating. 

That’s probably answer enough, isn’t it? Funny how it took writing a blog post for me to figure it out. 

Time to follow my inspiration. #30edits Abstract is on hold, indefinitely.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: #30edits, abstract, creative process, figure, inspiration

October 16, 2014 by Kat

A New Crush

I am one of those who has no trouble imagining the sentient lives of trees, of their leaves in some fashion communicating or of the massy trunks and heavy branches knowing it is I who have come, as I always come, each morning, to walk beneath them, glad to be alive and glad to be there.
— Mary Oliver in Winter Hours

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On a whim last week, I wanted to read some poetry. When I did a search of our online library, a few of Mary Oliver’s books popped up on the list. I like a lot of quotes I’ve read by her, I thought, so I checked out her book of essays and poetry, Winter Hours.

Oh my. Have I found a kindred spirit in Mary Oliver! Every other paragraph there is something I want to write down. She expresses in words what I feel about so many things, like the quote above. Did she reach into my head to extract that? No, no, of course not. It’s that she finds her inspiration in morning walks in the woods with her dog, creating beautiful and simple poetry and prose out of her experiences. She has followed her ritual long, long before I discovered a similar one for myself.

But the similarities mean that her words resonate deeply with me. She is someone I can learn from and look to for inspiration. Someone whose art speaks to mine. For aren’t poetry and photography similar? They are both made of fragments, a partial view of the whole, conveying an experience which must be expressed; can’t be suppressed.

Her creative philosophy resonates with me too. In an interview with her on NPR from a couple of years ago, she said, “I always feel that whatever isn’t necessary shouldn’t be in a poem.” And I thought, That’s exactly how I feel about photographs! In my imagery, I want to distill the greater world down to the essentials, keeping only what is necessary to convey something. Simpler is often better, I have found, for conveying emotion.
[Read more…]

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: forest, inspiration, Mary Oliver, poetry, trees

November 21, 2013 by Kat

Inviting Inspiration

Hey, do you know my friend Inspiration? She’s great fun. When she comes to visit we have an amazing time.

Were a good team, she and I. We are amazingly productive together when she shows up, always creating new work like crazy, generating wonderful ideas, and moving in new directions. I love the feeling of having her around. She makes me bold and confident, not caring what’s going on in the world around me. Could there be a better friend?

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There’s one problem with Inspiration though, and it’s a big one. She’s flighty and unpredictable. She doesn’t show up when it’s convenient and she’ll leave suddenly without warning. No matter how much you beg or plead, when she’s ready to go, she’s gone.

If she wasn’t so much fun to have around when she came to visit, I’d probably end my friendship with her. I mean, who really wants a friend so fickle? But I know what she does is not intentional. It’s as much me as it is her.

You see, if I don’t give her my attention, she’ll move on. If I think I can delay her departure by saying, “I can’t right now, hang on until tomorrow,” I’m deluding myself. She doesn’t have time for that, she’s got other people to inspire. If I don’t drop everything and take what she has to give, I can’t expect her to hang around indefinitely.

But I often do just that. Inspiration comes to visit and I say, “No thanks, not right now. I’ve got other things on my plate.” I forget what a great team we are, how much fun we have. I forget that I may not see her for a while, if I say no.

I forget that it’s my choice, in the end, whether Inspiration comes to visit. I might not have any control in when she shows up, how long she stays, or what we do while she’s here. But being open and willing and inviting her through the door… That’s all me.

She’s gone from here for the moment. Hopefully she’s having a grand time with you right now, since she’s not with me. I miss her, but her absence helps me realize that next time, I can’t put her off. I’ll rearrange my schedule and invite Inspiration in.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: autumn, creativity, fall, inspiration, leaf, tree

October 22, 2013 by Kat

Creative Cycles

It’s been a year since I started using my mobile device to take pictures. It was this time last year that I began carrying my old iPod Touch with me everywhere, discovering a whole new world in the possibilities. The possibilities of images in the places I move through every day. The possibilities of processing with apps. The possibilities for mobile photography to change everything. Oh my, but it was a wondrous time! Creativity at its best.

This year, things are different and yet not. It is once again autumn, and the sun has been shining through the trees in their gorgeous colors. I’ve been inspired, picking up the pace of collecting photographs, doing more editing. This year, I have better tools in my iPhone 5 and iPad. This year, I have more knowledge of apps and processing. This year, I see even more possibilities.

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It almost feels as if I’m waking up after a long, dry summer. I created a number of wonderful images this summer, don’t get me wrong, but it wasn’t like this. I didn’t make extra time, out and about, to photograph. I didn’t spend most of my free time experimenting with editing. I’ve been having a blast, exploring new techniques like I used for this image here. (You can see more on Flickr.)

I’m a big believer in creative cycles. I know that my creative energy has peaks and valleys during the day, and I try to to honor my personal cycle. I know that on a larger scale, creativity ebbs and flows over time with many variables. But what I wonder, with the arrival of autumn and inspiration, is if it’s possible to have a creative time of year. Because that’s what it feels like right now. As if I hit some threshold on the calendar and inspiration turned on. And I’m having a fantastic time.

I can sense there is lot more to come for me as the trees lose their leaves. There is so much more to explore with my new favorite artistic tools, and what may be my best time of year for creativity. I’m loving every minute.

How about you? Do you have a creative time of year? When is it and how does it show up for you?

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: autumn, creativity, cycle, inspiration, leaves

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

January 30, 2012 by Kat

Where I Am

Whoever you are
whatever you are
start with that,
whether salt
of the earth
or only
white sugar.

— Alice Walker

I picked up a sort-of new book this morning, Open Mind: Women’s Daily Inspiration for Becoming Mindful. After finishing Sarah Ban Breathnach’s Simple Abundance in 2010 I have been searching for another “daily meditation” type of book that would inspire me through the year. I’m terrible at reading these types of books daily, actually. I tend to pick them up every so often and read a week’s worth of entries, if they capture my attention. Some never stick with me at all. So I started this new book in early January but hadn’t kept up with it.

I found myself reaching for it this morning, and the quote above is where I started. Appropriate, no? It was as if the book was saying, “I forgive you, don’t worry about reading me daily, you’ll get what you need.”

I took today’s message to heart. Start wherever you are, with who you are, and move forward. We can all change from there. If we don’t acknowledge our starting point, accept where and who we are in this moment, are we really able to make fundamental changes in our lives? Will we see the good of ourselves in the future, after the change, if we don’t see the good in ourselves today?

We may not yet be where we want to be, the “salt of the earth” as Ms. Walker calls it, but there is value, still, in where we are, even as “white sugar.”

Whether it’s in your photography or your life, start today by accepting where you are. Spend a moment to appreciate who you are, right here and right now. Acknowledge the value that already resides within you.

That’s what I’m doing this morning. Maybe tomorrow I’ll work my way onward and outward. Today appreciating myself for where I am, with all of my quirks and imperfections, is enough.

PS – Only two days to the first Photo-Heart Connection link up! Are you getting ready?

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: black and white, inspiration, lines, personal growth

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