Monday, March 23, 2009

Creative Exposures

It had been ten years since my last visit to a Creative Exposures meeting. I has just finished a new portfolio of images, Spirits of Bonaventure, inspired by the novel Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, and so when Jim Pogue, a student of mine from the Columbus Museum asked me to be a guest speaker, I accepted, and took along "Spirits". The club was going strong at that point and the members filled a large meeting room at the Ledger-Enquirer. I understand that over the years, Creative Exposures' membership dwindled to almost nothing, before a recent arrival of a few new members reinvigorated the group. One of those new members is Alicia Jasper, a recent student of mine at CSU Continuing Ed and an able and conscientious secretary of the group. Alicia sends email announcements, forwards interesting information and generally gets the word out about the club-I was there because of her reminders. There were about a dozen of us last Wednesday night, including my old buddy Jim Pogue, a good mix of amateurs and professionals, and we had a lively discussion followed by a print critique. Creative Exposures meets the 3rd Wednesday of each month at Knology Cable Company, off Moon Rd. If you are interested contact Alicia aliciahf1@aol.com .

Seek out your fellow photographers for friendship and inspiration,
and Keep Shootin'.
Kenny

Monday, February 16, 2009

Family PhotoArchives






On Saturday, February 7, I presented a program for Columbus Regional Healthcare at their Mind, Body and Spirit women's retreat at CSU's Cunningham Center. The title of my presentation was Photography, Family and the Creative Life. The core of my talk was the Family section, where I discussed family photographs, the visual archives that illustrate our families' histories. I challenged the participants to: Become detectives/archaeologists for their families; to find out who has control of the photos (often the oldest surviving female member of a family), make a visual inspection of the oldest and rarest photos and act immediately to save the ones in danger and copy the others for reproduction and distribution to family members.


I challenge each of you to do the same; it will be the most important photographic project you will ever undertake. Please contact me with any questions; look here for samples of my restorations. If you attended my presentation, contact me for $50.00 off your first restoration.


Protect and preserve your family history and

Keep Shootin'

Kenny

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Magazine Assignment: Ft. Benning











Late Friday afternoon, I got a scratchy cell phone call at my office from the editor of RTO ONLINE MAGAZINE; one of his employees was at Ft. Benning for his son's graduation from Airborne School and he wanted photographs for a story. Luckily, I was able to adjust my schedule and was at Airborne Walk at 8:30am, where I worked for two hours on a very cold and windy Saturday morning. Here are a few of the best shots. Note the orange and white towers in the background of the portraits; these are iconic structures for the Airborne community, where trainees are hoisted to the top under their opened parachutes and dropped 250 ft. to the ground, the final phase of training before they leap from "perfectly good airplanes". The father, Jim Deering, was himself an Airborne graduate thirty years ago, which was the reason for the story.
Honor our troops and Keep Shootin',
Kenny




Columbus Ballet: Studio Portraits




Hello, everyone. My studio, in the Rankin Art Center, is a wonderful resource for area photographers. I teach classes there (CSU Continuing Education) and it is available for rent by those qualified to use it. More and more former students and freelancing pros are reserving the studio, and I am impressed with the portraits they produce.
I had the pleasure of photographing all of Columbus Ballet's Nutcracker dancers, in costume, just before Thanksgiving and thought you might be interested in my lighting diagram. The three-dimensional look of the portraits is largely due to the two skim lights, which are a recent addition to our lighting options in the studio.
See more of my ballet portraits here.
Columbus Ballet here.
Register for studio and other photography classes here.
Support the local arts and Keep Shootin',
Kenny

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Photography Center Closes



It is with some sadness that I announce the closing of the Photography Center at Rankin Square, after two years. My goal when I opened in Fall of 2006 was to give Columbus something I thought it needed: a gallery devoted exclusively to Fine Art Photography, and a gathering place for serious photographers. Alas, the public showed very little interest in our exhibits, and I discoverd that our local newspaper would rather run full-page articles on American Idol than cover the local visual arts scene, even wonderful exhibits with regional significance, like
" Final Harvest: Truck Farmers in the Deep South", an exhibit we mounted in the Spring of this year. The photographs, by Ga. Artist of the Year Perry Dilbeck, have received great acclaim and were published in a book of the same name, and it is a shame that there was so little interest in our community. There were other exhibits, including "In the Footsteps of Saint Francis" by John Lawrence, photographs taken over a ten year period in Italy, that I am proud to have given a temporary home. To my family, friends and students, CSU art students and faculty who attended the openings or stopped in at other times: You made my experiment a success in many ways; I enjoyed our discussions of the photographs on the walls and your own explorations in our medium.

I am not going anywhere. The Photography Center becomes the Art of Photography by Kenny Gray. I have chosen this name because I want to keep reminding people that photography is an art form, and although my commercial photography will be on the walls, I plan on occasional exhibits of fine art photography as well, mine and others that I admire.
Keep Shootin', and stay tuned,
Kenny

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Location Portrait Assignment from NEA

Last Friday I was contacted by the National Education Association in Washington, D.C. and asked to photograph Mr. Lester Mason Jr. , a life-long resident of Phenix City and a retired educator, for the cover story of the next issue of their monthly magazine. We quickly agreed on terms and I was then told that the deadline was October 8th! Why do so many large organizations wait until the last minute to schedule photography? It happens frequently with corporate groups that have events at Callaway Gardens- makes me feel better about my own procrastination. Nothing had been set up with Mr. Mason; I called him and we discussed his various civic activities and it became clear to me that his heart belongs to the children of the Phenix-Russell Boys and Girls Club, a hugely successful enterprise that he started in 1967. So I quickly scheduled a shoot at the club on Monday (my day off), and my son Gabe and I loaded lots of gear from my studio into my van and spent four hours at the club, photographing Mr. Mason in five different situations, most of them involving lots of rambunctious kids- Gabe and I were exhausted afterwards! After editing and adjusting the files, I over-nighted a DVD to NEA headquarters. My contact there sent me an email within an hour of the DVD's arrival: "Kenny, the portraits of Lester Mason are amazing. We LOVE them! Thanks for the great images."

Location photography can be challenging in a creative, organizational and physical sense , and adding a tight deadline adds extra stress, but there are sometimes big payoffs; Mr. Mason is 78 years old and a wonderful man, an inspiration. It was an honor to work with him and I am better for the experience.

Honor your elders, recognize our leaders, and Keep Shootin',
Kenny