Head’s exploding with stars after yesterdays trek to Madison for Paul Vanderbilt’s Wisconsin Academy Watrous Gallery exhibit Archive as a River, & WI Historic Society panel discussion of his work, which coincided with WI Book Festival, PhotoMidwest, Filter PhotoFestival, FlakPhoto, MMOCA’s Alec Soth exhibit, “From Here to There” and an arts reception at the Madison Public Library featuring FlakPhoto’s curated exhibit of new Midwest works & photo booklist based on MPL’s collection. And Filter PhotoFestival’s new artists’ photobooks display. Great smart visionary creative talk, people & works. This #mindmap of my notes tells some of the story this morning. Here are related links that tell the rest of the story: WI Book Festival , Photo Midwest , FlakPhoto , Filter PhotoFestival , MMOCA , Paul Vanderbilt Exhibit , Alec Soth , Madison Public Library Bubbler Additional random images from the day along State Street follow below. These are as shot, manual, no post editing, Canon T2i DSLR w/ 18-135 EFS
Posts Tagged ‘topography’
Madison PhotoMidwest, WI Book Festival, Alec Soth & Paul Vanderbilt
Posted in Art, Madison, photography, photomod, Wisconsin, tagged #public, art, documentary, exhibits, highways, history, photography, photomods, topography, typology, Wisconsin on October 19, 2014| 2 Comments »
After a Busy Summer
Posted in landscape, photography, photomod, roadhouses, roadside, Topography, Travel, tagged driftlessworld, highways, landscape, nostalgia, photography, photomods, rural, topography, travel, Wisconsin on August 30, 2014| Leave a Comment »
Taking the time to sit down and edit again after a long and busy summer away from blogging. Rainy days like the one we’re having at the moment don’t induce the kind of “carpe diem” guilt that parking in front of a laptop, editing does on a brilliant blue sky summer afternoon.
Here’s a tumble-down tin roof roadhouse sagging toward earth near Muscoda, WI. Old wood and tin, irresistible!
Teaseled
Posted in ecology, landscape, photography, roadhouses, roadside, Topography, Travel, tagged abandoned, landscape, nature, nostalgia, photography, photography landscape nature Wisconsin, rural, scenic, topography on June 8, 2014| Leave a Comment »
I admired the architecture of these dried tall weeds and discovered their name & history later:
Historical: Common teasel is a native of Europe where it has historically had many uses. The heads of a cultivated variety of teasel are used for wool “fleecing”, or raising the nap on woolen cloth. (Grieve 1995). These heads are fixed on the rim of a wheel, or on a cylinder, which is made to revolve against the surface of the cloth (Grieve 1995). No machine has yet been invented which can compete with teasel in its combined rigidity and elasticity (Grieve 1995). The roots of common teasel are also reported to have various medicinal values ranging from a remedy for jaundice to a cleansing agent (Grieve 1995). http://www.cwma.org/Teasel.html
What struck me was the remark that “no machine has yet been invented which can compete with teasel”. A case of ‘first design, best design’. The prickly cone shaped heads atop the tall stalks are amazingly tough and durable. More durable that the receding farmstead that the teasel, trees and other encroaching brush and weeds have overtaken. As natural forces will always overtake what people abandon.
Therein a reminder to stay humble. Our tenancy and current dominance over the landscapes of this earth is entirely fleeting. Grasses, sky and trees around the house appear to have enjoyed a good bit of teaseling on this windy day. CanonT2i DSLR, 18-135mm f5.6 @1/200, no post-editing except the c. notice.
In Everyone’s Backyard
Posted in Art, collage, influences, landscape, phonography, roadside, rural industrial, Topography, Travel, tagged documentary, landscape, man-altered, photography landscape nature Wisconsin, rural, rural industrial, topography, Wisconsin on June 6, 2014| Leave a Comment »
Evening walk down Airport Road, a residential, light industrial, verge of Wisconsin River wetlands mixed use landscape. Wilderness, industry and family homes collide in a kind of rural, blue collar pastoral. Which vista is sublime, which ridiculous? My beautiful cement factory, illuminated like a Byzantine icon. Where do we even begin to draw the distinction, when everywhere is altered and nowhere pristine, not even Yosemite Valley.
Because I see it everyday even the factory parking lot has gained meaning; for me and also for all who have worked/ work there- does our constant regard lend it an aesthetic also?I’m becoming obsessive about these kind of visual questions. Maybe it’s not healthy 😉
These flat shots are all preliminary study done with a Samsung G4 phone, of subjects I’ll revisit to build out with the DSLR. Under the influence: Reframing the New Topographics
Roadhouse, Fennimore Hilltop
Posted in ecology, landscape, Topography, Travel, Wisconsin, tagged abandoned, documentary, driftlessworld, Highway, history, landscape, On the Road, topography, travel, Wisconsin on April 26, 2014| 2 Comments »
I’ve driven past hundreds of times, in all light and weather, trying to catch what this old roadhouse is mumbling. Yesterday I thought someone, maybe a country workcrew had sprayed the grass in front with fluorescent blue paint. When I stopped later that afternoon and walked up close, the blue revealed itself to be wild violets. Like a chunk of the sky blow down at the feet of this abandoned dream. (Photo is RAW, no post-processing except resize for web and copyright txt.)
Surreal and Documentary Madison
Posted in Art, people, photography, portrait, tagged #public, history, Museum, people, photography, topography, Wisconsin on April 20, 2014| Leave a Comment »
Went to see FSA-era documentary photographer Ida Wyman’s “Chords of Memory” exhibit at the Watrous Gallery in Madison yesterday. Also checked out the Real/Surreal exhibit at MMoCA (Madison Museum of Contemporary Art), on loan from the Whitney Museum in New York. Both shows delivered: Wyman, humanity’s persistence & resilience. R/S intense reflection. Both, consideration of how the late 30’s pre & post WWII period affected peoples’ apprehension of a once benevolent world.
Surrealism /magical realism considered as a reaction to the atrocities of Fascism- which many of the featured artists witnessed firsthand– takes on an entirely different weight than the usual plastic amusement generated by melting clocks. If yr near Madtown and can get to these shows before 4/24, go.
Seen in the vicinity:
People and Places
Posted in ecology, landscape, New Jersey, tagged animals, farming, horses, jersey shore, landscape, nature, people, rural, scenic, sunset, topography, urban, Wisconsin on March 10, 2014| Leave a Comment »
In reviewing my work as I decide what to put on display next month, I’m a bit dumbfounded to encounter the common threads running through the photos, regardless of disparate locations, attitudes, equipment and intention at shooting time. Here are few that I was considering today for “From Back East to Midwest” at Timberlane Coffee in April. If you’re in the vicinity of Boscobel, you’ll want to stop by and share a great cuppa joe with the good people at Timberlane.

Lincoln Tunnel Helix, Elizabeth, NJ. “Now about 74 years old, the Lincoln Tunnel is one of the busiest crossings in the world, carrying over 40 million vehicles per year. In addition to passenger cars and trucks, each weekday morning, the busiest bus lane in the nation known as the Exclusive Bus Lane, or XBL, operates at the tunnel.”