Thursday, April 12, 2012

A morning in Seattle

I went to the Frye Art Museum in Seattle this morning to see a sculpture show by a Taiwanese artist named Li Chen. The work was beautiful in its decay and roughness. He used clay, rope, wood, and wire to build his figures, which aspire to immortality and greatness but are finite and earth-bound.
Detail from Eternity by Li Chen


Figures from Soul Guardians by Li Chen
If you haven't gotten to see this exhibit, it's worth a trip. Admission to the Frye is free and there is free parking! The museum is closing in a couple days for renovations so get there while you can.

After my museum visit, I made a trip to Kinokuniya and bought some stickers, pens and books (I really must stop buying books!). I then wandered into Uwajimaya where picked up some Sencha tea (a bargain at $10 for 100 teabags), roasted chestnuts (supposedly organic) and tiny mochi that came with their own plastic pickle fork.

All-in-all a really fine day.


Monday, April 9, 2012

Work-free Monday

What a delight to have 9 days off in a row. Yesterday, it was wandering around the Tide Flats taking photos. Today it's been chill-out time with practicing Czech (the few words I know), a yoga class, errands, and working Lightroom and Photoshop. I printed a couple of the pieces I was working on. This one I printed on a Pictorico Unryu paper (it has beautiful threads running through it). I cropped it and split-toned it. I really like how it looks like a drawing.:
Ducks in the muck
This next image is the bigger piece I worked on that includes the above image. Didn't like how it printed on a fiber paper so I'll have to try it again with different ICC settings perhaps.
Ocean triptych
It's so beautiful right now - I'm an idiot for being inside. I need to get my outdoor clothes on and work in the garden while I have the chance.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Rusty Tacoma

One of the great features of old, industrial cities is the decay and rust that can be found despite all efforts of city councils to modernize and "prettify." Tacoma has a great industrial area that has many abandoned spaces side-by-side with functioning buildings and industries.

Today we took an early morning photo wander around Tacoma's Tide Flats area with a friend. I schlepped my Fujica 6x4.5 and Zero Image pinhole cameras along with the Canon G9 (I can never be accused of favoring one camera over another). Took lots of rust photos with the idea of using them for textures in digital collage. However, I may just keep some of them as stand-alone photos since they're so cool looking.

I took a G9 macro shot of these rusty nails that were scattered on a cruddy old forklift.
Rusty nails
It never ceases to amaze me how many photo-worthy scenes I can find just by stepping in close.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Spider and the fly

This spider spent quite a bit of time in my window catching flies.


Here's one of the flies that didn't survive.



Sunday, April 1, 2012

Should be doing other things

I ought to be doing something productive, but instead I'm meandering around the computer. I could be in recovery mode from Artfest, or I could just be lazy (probably the latter).

I just upgraded to Lightroom 4 so I've been noodling around there. New features and some things that I used to hate (boosting brightness and contrast on import) are apparently gone. Hurray! I'll have to spend more time with it to see what else has changed.

Here's a shot I took the other day of a placid ocean and cruel looking clouds in Port Townsend.

Saturday, March 31, 2012

Artfest 2012

I've been at Artfest in Port Townsend the past few days learning and playing with paints and collage. I took a two day workshop with Jesse Reno and this is one of the pieces I painted. It's definitely not finished and I don't even know if I like it but it was fun to create.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Photograph worked in Painter 12

I recently upgraded my Painter software to version 12 so I decided to play around with some photos in the program today. Here is a Lubitel shot I took in Paris this past summer:

 I opened this image in Painter and then applied a woodblock effect to it. After that, I painted it with the different watercolor brushes available. This is the result:

I'm not very adept with the software so the end version isn't exactly what I was expecting. However, it was fun to mess around with the different brushes and watch the "drying" of the paint. Something different.