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January 9, 2013 by Kat

Storm Coming & Finding Exhibitions

Yesterday there was a storm coming, and I captured an amazing dramatic sky with my iPhone. By this morning the storm had settled in and it was raining buckets, just absolutely pouring, when I got up. There is something wonderful about hearing the rain come down outside and being cozed up inside with a cup of tea, don’t you think? This morning while I was in my comfy chair, I created this image I’m calling “Storm Coming.”

Storm Coming

Storm Coming

This image is part of a growing group of photographs with the “Trees in Space” theme. (I don’t think that’s the final name for the series, but it’s the best I’ve got so far.) The first couple of these came about quite by accident but I’ve continued to play and discover what it takes to make a good final image. It’s interesting how the first one or two came easily but the later ones are taking more work. I think I’m getting pickier about the end result, and it’s not just playing around any more. It’s interesting to observe, real time, how random play helped with discovery of this technique and then how it transitioned to artistic intent. I guess that is a transition that any series has to make at some point, to become a cohesive body of work. I think it would be fun to have enough good images in this series to exhibit them as a group someday, so I’ll keep working on them.

Speaking of exhibitions… I received a question on yesterday’s post on how I find out about exhibitions. It was a great question, and I realized that while I’ve talked about submitting to exhibitions before, I had never discussed how I find them in the first place.

I’ve mentioned this before, but I have been lucky to find and join the local photography guild, the Willamette Valley PhotoArts Guild, which is dedicated to supporting photographic artists. I first learned about upcoming exhibitions through this organization. There are a couple of members in the guild who are well connected in the arts community, and they forward on the “Call to Artists,” which is what the notifications of an upcoming exhibition that is seeking submissions are called.

Since I’ve been applying and participating in exhibitions, I’ve learned a bit about where and how these all happen, and I can share a few ideas on how you can find them in your area:

Some ideas on where to find exhibitions:

  1. Join a local art guild. I am a member of two different art guilds in the area, the Corvallis Art Guild (which includes all 2D art except traditional photography) and the PhotoArts Guild I’ve already mentioned. Not all art guilds welcome photographers, but they can still be a useful resource for tapping into the local art community and learning about exhibitions. Not all send on Calls to Artists to their membership like the PhotoArts Guild either, so check on how the guild supports its membership. I encourage you to join regardless, however, because it is great way to learn and connect into a community of artists.
  2. Find a local arts center. Our local Arts Center sends out Calls to Artists, and hosts exhibitions supporting both local and national artists. They have a small gallery space dedicated to rotating exhibits of local artists, and this is where my Market/Wheels series was exhibited last April.
  3. Look at local colleges and universities. Many universities and community colleges have gallery spaces where they rotate exhibits, often in meeting centers that are rented out to companies and organizations. When you find one, look for contact information and request to be put on their mailing list.
  4. Look at town and city halls. Public buildings often have exhibition spaces in their lobbies and will send out Calls to Artists.  Again, search out the contact and ask to be put on their mailing list.
  5. Notice non-traditional gallery spaces in the local area. Some businesses, like restaurants or offices, will use rotating art exhibits from local artists to decorate their walls. We have stores in town that offer window space for exhibitions as well. When you see one, ask for contact information for the coordinator.
  6. Ask other local artists. If you meet artists locally at arts fairs, open studios or other events, ask them if they exhibit and then pick their brain if they do! Most artists are open and helpful, and can give you some tips on where to look and how to find out about exhibitions. Each area is going to be different and you will need to learn how to tap into the artist’s network in your local area.

The list so far focuses on local exhibitions, because those are often the easiest to get into and a good place to start your journey into exhibitions, without a lot of hassle with transporting your art a long way. Some other places to look, beyond the local community:

  1. Look for arts centers or galleries in the larger area dedicated to your art medium and get on their mailing list for updates and call for entries.  Portland, Oregon is 90 miles from where I live, but it’s the biggest city near me and is home to a great art community.  Newspace Center for Photography and Blue Sky Gallery are both located in Portland and dedicated to supporting the photographic arts, both locally and nationally. Since these organizations support a larger base, competition is much, much higher to get into exhibitions they host. (I’m kind of amazed I got a piece accepted at Newspace!)
  2. CaFÉ™, or CallforEntry.org, is a website that supports different organizations with online submissions for exhibitions. You can sign up and be notified via email about Calls to Artists through them.

There are probably many more, but these are the ones I’ve learned about so far in my journey into exhibiting over the last year and a half. Start by doing a web search for local guilds and exhibitions being shown in your area, and go from there. There may be a vibrant arts community right under you nose, and you only need to join it!

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: art guild, exhibition, mobile photography, Newspace, PhotoArts Guild, silhouette, space, The Arts Center, tree

January 8, 2013 by Kat

Photography at the Edge

I’m so excited today! Yesterday I found out that one of my recent mobile pieces has been accepted into Newspace Center for Photography‘s 2013 themed exhibition, Photography at the Edge. The exhibit will run from February 1 through 24 at the Newspace Main Gallery in Portland, Oregon. The artist’s reception is February 1 from 6-9pm.

Tree, Squared

Tree, Squared

The theme of this exhibition, Photography at the Edge, covers artwork created using any non-traditional photography techniques, including mobile photography. I chose to submit “Tree, Squared” because it shows the unusual possibilities of mobile photography and processing, in this case combining modern digital effects with a vintage look. The possibilities of what you can do with your mobile device are really endless, as I’ve discovered through my experimentation and play over the last few months. Last week I created a portfolio gallery here on my site, called In Transition, to showcase some of this recent experimental work.

I am beyond thrilled to be included in this exhibition! The list of participants sent out yesterday includes fine artists from all over the country. If you live in the Portland area, I hope you will stop in and see the exhibition in February, and I would love to meet you at the artist’s reception on February 1.

Now, off to get the piece printed, framed and ready to hang…

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: exhibition, mobile photography, Oregon, tree

January 4, 2013 by Kat

Why Create?

Why do you create? Do you know? Is there some inner drive that compels you? Are there external motivations?

This is a question I’m pondering for myself today. Why do I create?

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I create because I love it.
I create because it expresses something I can’t express another way.
I create because I learn about myself.
I create because it helps me understand who and where I am in this world.
I create because it brings me joy.

That’s why I create. It’s not because I’m in the business of creating. Because I want to make money from my creative work.

I’m pondering this question today because yesterday I was reading about a new class being offered that will teach about what kind of art sells, so that you can create work that is more commercially viable. This looks like a great class, but it didn’t resonate with me. This morning I sat down and considered why, and it comes back to the reasons why I create.

First, and foremost, I create for me. And if I ever shift that to create for others, whether it’s to sell more prints or gain more followers or whatever, then it seems like I will lose some thing essential in the work I create. Me. My connection to heart.

This is no small question to ponder, especially when you have a business that is linked to your art as I do with Kat Eye Studio. Your following is built on what you create. Part of the fears that have come up for me over the last few months, as I’ve been exploring mobile and more non-representational forms of photography, have been due to this. It’s such a dramatic departure from my old style, will people stick around if I change? Will I have to start all over and rebuild to get to this same place? They may seem like silly fears, but they are there.

What everything comes down to really is pretty simple. The whole idea behind my classes, the whole premise that led to Kat Eye Studio in the first place, is that when you create from the heart good things happen. You learn about yourself. You are happier. You are filled with gratitude for who and where you are. And yes, the quality of your work improves. Because that’s what I’ve learned, through my own creating.

My creative journey takes me onward. It changes me; my art changes too. As long as I’m creating from the heart, I know I will be in the right place for me. That may never mean huge commercial success or my art as my main source of income. Maybe I’m lucky to have the luxury that doesn’t have to be my goal or purpose right now. I think a lot of us have this same luxury: We can create what we want to create, without worry about selling our work for a living. There is a certain freedom in that.

Why do you create? It’s a good thing to stop and ask yourself this question once in a while. Ground yourself in the reasons why you create. Because as long as you stay true to your own heart as you create, you are in the right place for you regardless of how you answer the question.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: creative, mobile photography, Oregon, personal growth, tree

January 3, 2013 by Kat

Blending to Perfection

When you are creating, do you find moments when everything comes together and it just feels right? Your know your piece is finished. When you are new to a medium, it’s not as easy. You may not take something far enough or you may go too far, ruining something good. As you learn and progress, I think it’s easier to know when something is “done.” It’s part of the learning process, and our own style, to develop that feeling of done.

In mobile/digital art, I’ve learned that the name of the game is blending. Using multiple apps and blending them together, until it feels “done.” I had already started on this path, as I created some of my earlier pieces like Rain Painting and Winter Flowers. I had only touched the tip of the iceberg of what is possible with blending in those, however. I’m going crazy now. Today as I share one of this week’s pieces for Paint Party Friday I thought I would also give you a taste of the kind of blending I’m doing now, and how I created this one, called Under the Surface.

IMG_1867

Here’s the starting image, taken with the ProCamera app. I love it! You can easily separate exposure and focus, and switch between aspect ratios within the app, going from square to rectangular.

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Then the fun started. I’ve created this little matrix of images to walk through the process of creation, but it doesn’t even cover all of the steps. To be honest, I get so many layers going I don’t even remember the exact steps but I’m trying to recreate them to share.

photo

From left to right, top to bottom:

  1. The first step was into Snapseed, to shift the color a bit. This also added some texture and vignetting.
  2. Next I pulled that image into Distressed FX to add textures. The next three are the image with various textures added. You can’t add more than one texture within the app, so I save an image of each texture I like on the photo. Distressed FX also will do color filters in addition to textures, but I often turn that off and just use the textures. It’s become my go-to app for textures lately.
  3. From there, I start to blend. The center image is a blend of the different texture images I saved out of Distressed FX. I’ve starting using the Image Blender app for blending, because it is easier to use and has more blending options than Iris Photo Suite. When blending, I just play with the blending modes and percentages until it looks good to me. There is no logical sequence I’ve got for this step.
  4. Once I had a nice blend, I started to use the painting apps. I take the blended photo into the apps and play around with different effects to get some I like. Middle right is the “Aquarell” painting filter from Autopainter HD (a recent favorite) and bottom left is from Glaze.
  5. From there I started blending again, with the textured image and the painted images. Bottom middle is the new blend.
  6. I was starting to lose the colors, so I took that blend back through Distressed FX and added a filter or two.

From there, I did more blending with previously created layers to get the final result.

Under the Surface

Under the Surface

There were more steps and layers than these I shared, but it gives you the basic idea of how the final piece was created. There is a depth of color and texture in the final painting that is built through blending layers which won’t exist when you use a single app. It’s really the creative part of the process, and where the unique touch of each person will come in. I’ve started to learn the apps, what works on different images and how to achieve a certain look, as I play. Eventually I might develop a “style” but right now it’s all about play and exploration. Lots of fun!

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: blue, digital painting, green, mobile photography, mobile tutorial, Oregon, Oregon Coast, silhouette, tree, tutorial

January 2, 2013 by Kat

Ready for Launch

Three… Two… One… Blast off. Time to launch back into real life. After a glorious eleven days off of my regular schedule, today I go back to normalcy. What a wonderful break! No schedule to follow, no real deadlines to worry about. I went on several hikes, read a bunch of books, hung out with my family and worked on photography projects. I spent a lot of time in my pajamas, I will happily admit. Heaven!

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As much as I loved the time off, it’s always good to get back into a routine. I do best with a regular schedule. I’m feeling a bit rusty and creaky in the routine this morning though, even with my blogging, so I’ll be short and sweet.

If you are launching back into reality today too, I hope your reentry goes well. It’s my time to launch… I’ll see you here tomorrow.

Filed Under: The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: Corvallis, mobile photography, Oregon, silhouette, space, tree

January 1, 2013 by Kat

Celebrating One Year – Photo-Heart Connection: December

Simplicity. Peace. Beauty.

That’s what I see when I look at this image. A brief moment in time captured, expressing something wonderful.

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I also see a landscape. And I scratch my head quizzically, wondering, “When did I become a landscape photographer?”

The answer whispered to me: When you stopped telling yourself you weren’t one.

Oh, yeah.

When I threw out the rules for my photography and starting to follow what brought me joy. When I let myself have fun and play again. When I threw out the need for perfection and pixels and began to create with a terrible, low-resolution iPod Touch camera.

When I stopped defining myself.

That’s when I became a landscape photographer. And a painter. And whatever I feel like being today. Tomorrow it will probably be something different.

Because you know what? None of the labels matter. It’s just me and my art. Approaching each day as it comes, with openness and joy.


Well. If that doesn’t conclude my transformation of the last few months, I’m not sure what would. From the fear of change in October to the emergence of November to this acceptance that arrived in December. Completely unplanned, somehow my monthly Photo-Heart Connections tracks this dramatic transition to a new approach to my art. As I worked on my “eighteen months” project I was a bit shocked to discover that I hadn’t picked up my dSLR at all between October 22nd and December 14th, when I went out for my night shoot. I mean, I knew I hadn’t picked up my “big” camera for a while, but there was something about seeing it right there in Lightroom that was a bit shocking. And you know what? I didn’t care. Because I’m having so much fun with all of this! I’m going with it.

This month concludes the first year of the Photo-Heart Connection. It’s been an amazing practice! I’ve gained so much from it, as well as the community of people who have joined me this year. The guests posts from the last week have shared some amazing stories of connection, and I am truly honored to be able to play host to such a wonderful community of artists. I’m excited to continue for 2013. Who knows what will emerge?

To celebrate a new year of the Photo-Heart Connection, I’ve created a new button that better expresses my feelings about the whole practice. You can copy the code from the sidebar here.

kat eye view

And as a second part of the New Year celebration, I am going to give away a small matted print of this image, entitled “Windblown,” to one of the participants in this month’s Photo-Heart Connection. All you have to do to enter is to participate! So, what is your Photo-Heart Connection this month?


Filed Under: Photo-Heart Connection, The Kat Eye View of the World Tagged With: coast, mobile photography, Oregon, photo-heart connection, silhouette, tree

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