A Site for Emerging Artists
Posts tagged photography
Summer Artist Updates/Part 2
Jul 6th
More updates on our Featured Artists from the past six months, as they pursue their careers. Check and see what your favorite artists are doing!
- Has just posted his most recent oil painting on his website – see it here.
- Will be showing his work in the upcoming Santa Barbara Studio Artists’ Tour.
- Is now writing for FineArtViews.com on a regular basis. Read his latest article here.
- Has two pieces in an upcoming exhibition called “Energizing Radiance” at Gallery Fifty Six in Memphis, Tennessee.
- Her work is now available as framed and canvas prints and posters through Fine Art America.
- Three of her paintings: “Dream” , “Meeting each other” and “Blue kite and 2 swimming elephants” (shown above) were chosen for publication by the editors of “Faleze de piatra” magazine of poetry. See her blog for details.
- Has started painting a series of ten nudes, which she will be exhibiting in September.
- Is preparing two canvases for an upcoming exhibition in Alcoy, Spain in October and November.
- Was one of 11 finalists in the April 2010 Environmental Contest sponsored by the National Resources Defense Council. She entered 6 artworks based on water protection and conservation to NRDC Flickr Page NRDC: The NRDC Environmental Art Prize
- Was interviewed by Terri Dyer of the Reporter Ledger of Lakeland, Florida. See the article here.
- Has published two new books. Check them out here.
- Just posted a fun fashion show with her new plush designs.
- Updated her website.
- Will be participating in the Atlanta Midtown Festival of Arts in September.
- Is continuing to promote her book “No Longer Daddy’s Little Girl“, a inspirational book for fatherless young girls.
- Is leasing space at Wall Talk Art & Design in Northampton, Massachusetts to display her work, and working on watercolors. See her blog for details.
- Had her work published on a local magazine cover.
- Will be participating in a fine art show in West Springfield, Massachusetts in November.
- Has added new work to her website and updated her blog.
- Invites you to visit her decorative arts site and Etsy shop.
- Is working on new pieces for his “Dark Carnival” and “Requiem in Oblivion” series, which will be posted on his website. Check back frequently!
- Will be showing his work in the Latin American Arts Biennial in the Bronx, New York in September.
- Has an updated website.
- Will participate in a group exhibition/auction for The Scoop Foundation, a charitable organization.
- Preparing artworks to be exhibited at the Milkboy Recording Studios in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
- Is working on many commissions and has an updated website.
- Just returned from a visit to Cherrapunji, which is the wettest place on earth. He posted five paintings from his trip on his website.
- Is currently showing new work at a show called “Fluidity” at the Brush Gallery in Lowell Massachusetts.
Featured Artist Kevin Boldenow
Jun 17th
Kevin Boldenow’s life-long passion for photography began the moment he picked up his parents’ Brownie camera. Since that time, Kevin has built a career as a professional photographer specializing in 35mm, medium format, and digital landscape and figurative imagery. In addition to his native Michigan, Kevin has lived in five states, including Texas, New Jersey, and Virginia, before moving to Florida in 1996.
Inspired by the density and drama of the landscape, Kevin began to work primarily in black & white, and black & white infrared film, as a way to capture the myriad textures and details found in the overwhelmingly verdant landscape. Unlike color, Boldenow believe’s that black & white more dramatically reveals the combination of light, heat, and shadows found in the already mystical landscape. In his own words, Kevin seeks to instill “a sense of awe of the natural environment and the feeling of serenity we have when we allow ourselves to truly experience the beauty of nature”.
Boldenow’s images make you take careful observation of the subject matter. The subtle beauty captivates your senses. You can almost feel the sun’s rays playing through the trees, hear the harmonic chorus of morning insects, and experience the smell of moistened earth and dew on the rich foliage. As a natural extension of the love of nature, Kevin has progressed into creating Fine Art Nudes, primarily in a natural setting. Boldenow’s work continues to evolve, ever experimenting and expanding his work and style.
Boldenow’s work has been presented throughout the state of Florida, having received numerous awards, including the South Florida Cultural Consortium Fellowship for Visual and Media Artists(2004). Boldenow also has served as President of the Lighthouse Gallery Camera Club from 1999-2002, works as an instructor at the Elliott Museum, and has now started a Photography Group in Martin County.
Artist’s Statement
At an early age, my Father pointed out the importance of nature. I learned how ignoring Mother Nature’s wonders could only lead to certain disaster. Growing up in the 1960’s, I realized how destructive a course we had taken – dumping pollutants in the Great Lakes, air quality, and the use of DDT and other pesticides without proper testing was upsetting the balance of our ecology. My Junior High School class participated in the first Earth Day celebration at the University of Michigan. It left a lasting impression.
I am not interested in coercing people to become die-hard environmentalists, but rather to look at my photography and recognize the beauty, vitality, and necessity of our natural resources. By viewing my photography, I hope that people make a concerted effort to preserve the environment for the pleasure and responsible use for future generations.
Thematically, my photography is a look outside our surroundings. I want people to feel as if they are a part of my picture. We are a part of nature, and coexist with every living thing on this planet. Harming nature inflicts damage on all of us, and does away with a piece of our soul.
I’m hoping my photography, no matter where taken, creates a better understanding of our environment. I want my audience to recognize the beauty and power of nature, not just in Florida, but everywhere in the world.
My Father would be proud.
Please visit Kevin Boldenow’s website for his complete portfolio and more information.
Images of Life/Interview with Steve Paxton
Jun 11th
By Carolyn Edlund
Photographer Steve Paxton has a thriving business taking wedding and portrait photos. He also maintains a separate website for his other photographic pursuits, including a project called “The Least of These”, an Urban Portraits portfolio featuring amazing images of the homeless in Seattle. His website contains stories about his subjects, information and tips about photography and approaching the homeless in conversation, videos and much more.
Take note of how Steve’s professional presentation, commitment to his work and his following establish him as an expert and a great resource for clients, as well as other photographers and artists. He shows a spirit of generosity in sharing his expertise through Q&A and tutorials, featuring the work of other photographers and promoting excellence. Steve is an outstanding model for emerging artists. He agreed to speak about his Urban Portraits portfolio and other projects.
AS: What prompted you to start on your Urban Portraits project? What will you do with it?
SP: The project began in 2007 after I started searching for something different and unique to photograph. I was slowly burning out and needed to approach photography from a different angle. As a portrait photographer, I had always wanted to capture photographs of individuals living on the street. Capturing “urban portraits” started out as something that I thought I would try once or twice just a break from the sometimes routine nature of regular portrait photography. As time went on and as I began making connections with people living on the street, I realized that it was more than just capturing photographs. Each person I met had a different life story and most were eager to share it with me. The stories help to bring my images to life. Now each year I make time to periodically head out to Seattle to reach out to the homeless living on the streets. I occasionally bump into homeless folks that I met a year or two earlier. It’s fascinating to hear about what they have been up to.
AS: On your site, you show your urban portfolio with stories of your subjects. What have you learned about the homeless people you photographed?
SP: I think about this quite a bit as I walk up and down the alleys making contact with the less fortunate. As you might guess, I mostly run into older men living on the street. Occasionally I meet a homeless woman, but they are almost always with a man. The city can be a dangerous place at night so you don’t find many young teens or women running around alone. I found that many of the men I meet on the street are dealing with one or more of the following issues:
(1) Addicted to alcohol and/or drugs
(2) Have a mental health issue, or
(3) Lost their spouse to death or divorce.
The last one really surprised me. Losing a spouse can be terribly difficult for someone. For many men, their wife is what helped keep them stabilized and grounded. It’s really sad to see a man living on the streets openly weep about losing his wife. Stepping back for a moment, imagine if you are dealing with several of these issues at once. It’s a situation that can go from bad to worse very quickly. A middle aged man loses his wife which in turn sends him into depression. This causes him to drink which leads to him missing work. This causes him to lose his job and eventually his house. One thing leads to another and he quickly finds himself living on the street or out of his car. The most striking thing about this is that it could happen to any one of us.
AS: The quality of your photographs are amazing. Are you using any special techniques to achieve the look?
SP: I use various techniques in Photoshop to create the distinctive “look” in each of my urban portraits. I prefer muted, dark, edgy urban images. I choose to apply this type of processing because I believe it suits the subject matter very well. I also like the style.
Going decades back, street photography was traditionally shot with high contrast black and white film. This creates the dark, urban feel that most of us expect to see in street photography. I have chosen to vary this just a bit by allowing some of color to show through while still maintaining a high contrast, desaturated feel common in urban scenes. Not everyone is going to like the look and feel of my images, but I am OK with that.
AS: Please tell us about your other work and how you earn a living.
SP: I have been a wedding and portrait photographer in the Seattle area for over 15 years. I am absolutely passionate about making close connections with people and I love the beauty and magic of weddings! I view every wedding as a unique challenge and opportunity to create special images that will endure the test of time. I love working with high school seniors to create images that reflect their individual style. Senior portrait sessions take place in grungy alleys, around old buildings, and in beautiful outdoor locations! You can check out what I am up to at www.PaxtonPortraits.com and www.ExpectSomethingRemarkable.com. My urban portrait work can be found at www.PaxtonPrints.com.
The Art of the Great Idea
Jun 2nd
By Carolyn Edlund
Meet Minnesota native Giesla Hoelscher, an artist with a great idea. She creates collages of cityscapes, landmarks, and well-loved places in St. Paul, Minneapolis, Chicago and other cities, as well as Midwest colleges.
What’s so great about Giesla’s idea? She uses images of places the public has emotionally bonded with to create collages and other items that are powerfully compelling to a buyer.
An earlier article, Sell Your Art by Making a Connection discussed themes as an idea for producing a line of consumer products. Let’s see how Giesla takes this to a whole new level, and has created a business with unlimited possibilities.
AS: Why did you start making your collages?
GH: I learned the collage technique while I was in school for graphic design and really loved it. After I graduated in 2001 and had a hard time finding a job as a graphic designer after 9/11, I started my business which at that time mostly focused on handmade items. I loved doing the collages and I thought it’d be really cool to try the technique I learned with my own photography of local places. I did one collage of St. Paul and got a small positive response. I approached a local gallery with it and they told me if I could make five more so I had a total of six, they’d give me a small show. That’s what started the whole thing. I started creating them out of my love for where I live and as it’s grown, I’ve gotten a chance to talk to people who are just as excited about my work and where they live as I am (or even more so). It’s so fun to sell to those people because they are just like me.
AS: How are you marketing your work?
GH: I initially started doing art fairs and from there was noticed by retailers (frame shops, small art galleries) who approached me to sell my work on consignment. I eventually became connected with a few retailers who sold enough of my work that they switched from consignment to wholesale. Wanting to stretch myself from doing just doing the location work, I started creating collages that are inspired by vintage advertising which I’ve always been fascinated by. Since it’s so different from my location work, I chose to sell that exclusively on Etsy.
AS: How do you choose the elements for each one?
GH: Extensive research and help when I can get it. I’ve learned so much I didn’t know about where I live just by doing these collages. I try to get a local’s perspective for each collage. For the colleges, I try to find current students or alumni to tell me little things that only students who go there would know. Rituals, off campus hangouts, that kind of thing. I could easily just go to the school website and read about all the history and what the student buildings are, and I guess that’d get the point across, but it wouldn’t make that connection and that’s really important to me. As I expand my work to include areas outside of Minnesota, the research becomes doubly important. I want the collages to appeal people that are from the area as well as to tourists, and that can be difficult since most literature I find is aimed at tourists.
AS: Tell us about your custom work.
GH: I hadn’t considered doing custom work until I was approached by a customer who asked me for a collage for her dad’s 50th birthday which coincided with the 75th anniversary of their family service garage. They gave me newspaper articles, old photos, and asked me to take current photos of the garage. It was then that I realized that so many people keep their photos and other memorabilia closed away in albums and hardly ever show them off. I thought, “How awesome would it be to give people an opportunity to show off their memories in one piece of art?” It’s hard to try to decide what photos you want to frame and hang up. What’s great about a collage is you don’t have to decide.
Since placing an ad on Google a couple of years ago, I’ve been getting work from around the country from people who’ve wanted to do collages for birthdays, anniversaries, to show off their custom car, commemorative of a softball team, you name it. It’s so fun to see what people give me and to create something they really love from it. It’s a new challenge every time, kind of like putting together a puzzle.
AS: What are your plans for the future?
GH: I’d like to continue to travel and create collages from around the United States. Eventually I’d like to travel internationally to capture places like Paris and Ireland.
AS: What are some effective ways you have found for increasing sales?
GH: A lot of customers have asked me about having a store so I recently opened a studio to give customers a way to shop when I’m not at art fairs. I’ve found that locally people prefer to purchase artwork in person instead of through my website so they don’t have to pay for shipping. Twitter and Facebook have been huge for me to spread the word about my work and create a more national fan base rather than just locally. It hasn’t resulted in more sales just yet, but right now I see the connections to be more crucial than the sales. The more people I can connect with throughout the US will definitely help me later on as I try to create collages of different areas.
AS: How do you work with your art publisher?
GH: The relationship is rather new so I’m still learning about what they need from me to make sales and they’re learning how I create my art so they know what to tell their customers. They’ve been able to sell my artwork to places that I would’ve never thought to approach and also places that might’ve been difficult for me to approach as an artist with no representation. So far they’ve taken over my wholesale accounts which is quite a relief for me as it’s hard for me as an individual to provide the quantity and discounts that most wholesalers want.
AS: What suggestions would you have for emerging artists?
In my eyes, being truly successful is being able to support yourself solely from your art and I’m not quite there. I still have a part-time job to support myself through the winter months when there are no art fairs in Minnesota and also just to provide a regular paycheck as custom work and retail orders can be spotty. That being said, because I’m able to make a good portion of my living from my art, I do consider myself to be successful on a small scale.
My suggestion is to surround yourself with a team of people who support and help you. It can get pretty tough sometimes – financially, emotionally and creatively. If you feel alone, it can be enough to make you want to quit, or at the very least pack it in for a long time. Know that it always gets better if you’re on the right track; if you’re making the art that you love and that is sellable. I’ve had some pretty downright awful days but I can’t imagine doing anything else. There will always be bad clients and bad sales and sometimes they can come at the worst times. Continue to look forward and make change for yourself. It doesn’t happen overnight or even within a few years, but I believe if you’re marketing yourself well and showing people how awesome you are, success will happen eventually.
Visit Giesla Hoelscher’s website for more information and her complete portfolio.
Present Your Art Perfectly ~ Interview with Johanna Moore
May 22nd
By Carolyn Edlund
Johanna Moore and partner David Keef own Artifacts in Farmingdale, Maine. Their shingle reads “Gilders, Frame Makers and Purveyors of Fine Art”. Johanna agreed to speak with us about her business, and how she works with fine artists to enhance and present their work in the best possible way.
AS: Could you tell us how you got started in your business, and describe the different types of work that you do?
JM: When we moved back to Maine after I was graduated from Temple University in Philadelphia, I worked in a Portland art supply store which also provided a high quality picture framing service. It was at this job that I learned the rudiments of picture framing design and joinery. David had been working for my father in his antiques business so, in 1990, we decided to open a store in what is now called the Arts District. I took my background in faux finishing, gilding and mural painting, which I started practicing while in Philadelphia working my way through college, and added it to the picture framing service which we offered in addition to selling antiques in the gallery. (I learned scene painting skills on the job working under an accomplished scene painter, and for faux finishes I learned a lot from the Isabel O’Neil painting studio. For gilding, I took some initial gilding seminars through the Society of Gilders).
We quickly gained a reputation for our custom designed hand-crafted picture frames. We work with artists, collectors, museums, and designers. Twenty
years ago our shop sold European antiques, fine art and mid-century design. We narrowed our focus to antique fine art to compliment our framing services. Our frames are made with traditional techniques: hand-carving, traditional gilding, painting or staining custom finishes. Our designs are historic, contemporary, or original.
AS: In your opinion, what are the biggest mistakes emerging artists make in presenting their work?
JM: In my experience, I have seen some emerging artists interested in producing their artwork and, once completed, presenting their work gets ignored. Often they choose frames that are both cheap and cheaply made, or frames that are too skinny or visually crowd the artwork. They choose matting colors which destroy any chance of a viewer actually being able to see their work.
I always try to educate artists in the importance of presentation. It doesn’t matter if an artist’s work is portraits of Zombies or paintings of fields of flowers, if it’s not presented professionally and in a way which draws the viewer into it, then very few people will notice it.
AS: What elements are most crucial in choosing or designing a frame for a work of art? How do you work with an artist on presentation?
JM: When we work with an artist preparing a frame design for an exhibit the factors we think about are:
- Subject - Portraiture can take grand ornate broad frames or simple austere contemporary floaters. Abstract contemporary paintings on canvas work well in platform frames, floaters, or even no frame at all.
- Technique - Surface texture, assemblage, depth. A still life painting by Tina Ingraham may not look right in the same frame we would choose for an encaustic painting by Willa Vennema.
- Palette – we always look at the overall tone of a painting. Is it warm, cool, monochromatic? A frame color can make or break the finished presentation. We often ask the artist if they want to push one color over another in their painting and use their ideas to get the right color in the frame. The color theory work of Josef Albers is a great reference for how we work with this aspect of frame design.
- Size/depth - a small painting might be best presented in a wide frame to give it enough breathing room between its edges and the wall on which it hangs. A very large painting can be edged in a narrow frame which acts more as a protective clean-lined edge.
One example of our approach to design was when we made the frames for an exhibit by miniaturist Mary Hart for her “Lexicon” series of diptychs. Each painting was 1” to 2” square. There were 14 framed diptychs in all to be installed into a gallery with large wall space. We needed to frame them in a way which kept them precious, but helped them not become engulfed by the whiteness of the walls. We decided to frame them with the same uniform outside dimension in a floater frame we developed which made them look like pages from a book. We produced a patina over aluminum leaf which was a warm tarnished finish that I worked to create by looking at some shadow colors in Mary’s paintings.
By combining all of these factors we try to achieve balance. I feel we are most successful when a viewer comments on the frame only after they have commented on the painting—if they make no comment about the frame we feel we’ve totally succeeded . Your readers can see some of our design projects on our web log.















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Featured Artist Julia Hacker








