Archive for April, 2009

More Links, at Keene State College

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

The good folks at Keene State College have been interested in featuring my photos of downtown Keene and the Pumpkin Festival on their new sports website. Their idea was to showcase what a beautiful town Keene New Hampshire is and what a great place for parents throughout New England to send their kids to college. I couldn’t agree more – so photos were added to their web site: www.keeneowls.com

Links on that page take you to my photos on Keene Pumpkin Festival, Central Square, Downtown Keene and panoramas of Keene and Mount Monadnock. Good memories all around for that scenic New England town.

19th Annual Keene Pumpkin Festival, Oct. 17, 2009

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

It was great to run across the website for the Keene Pumpkin Festival and see so many of the photos that I took over the years on that site. See www.pumpkinfestival.org/index.html.

What a fun event and one that was homegrown in Keene until Boston took it on a couple years . Beginning in the early 90′s the first Keene Pumpkin Festival featured about 600 carved jack-o-lanterns ringed around Central Square, made by the kids at the nearby Keene Middle School. Then someone thought, as Bob Cousey used to say in announcing the Celtics games, “What’s the record in this joint?” So the Keene Pumpkin Festival took on a life of it’s own, eventually becoming the dominant activity of Center Stage Cheshire County. A Guinness Record category was established and in 1992, Keene set the first Guinness World Record at 1,628 lit jack-o’-lanterns. That was just the beginning. The Second record was the following year at 4,817 and the Third in 1994 at 10,540.

It became a phenom! New Englanders poured in to see the event and record after record was set until in 2003, 28,552 set the Eight Guinness World Record as jack-o’-lanterns filled downtown Keene streets in every direction. About that time, Boston picked up the idea and ran with it and took a couple head to head contests with Keene. Talk about David and Goliath. Keene with 25,000 hardy New Hampsherites against Metro Boston. Still a lot of fun and I hope to get there this year when traveling in support of the release of my new book on The Connecticut River by Wesleyan University Press.

Lots of my Keene Pumpkin Festival photos are available right on Main Street and Creative Encounters Store. You can also find them by searching on my website on the Stock/Archive tab.

Connecticut River Book Proofs

Friday, April 24th, 2009

Every day, it gets closer to publication. This week Pam Wagner and I re-read the text of my book on the Connecticut River, made those changes that had to be made and forwarded the layout back to University Press of New England. Amanda will coordinate the changes and then I hope to see one more pdf proof to make sure all is in order – and a set of color press proofs to compare to the ink jet set that I sent to Wesleyan University Press. The press proofs look very good on first comparison and I can’t wait to see the whole series. It total, there will be 136 full page, full color photos in my book now titled:

The Connecticut River, a journey through the heart of New England. It will be out on the bookshelves this September and I hope to coordinate presentations around the release time in New England. A ver si!

Clifford Ross at Austin Museum of Art

Friday, April 24th, 2009

Here’s a recent show that I really enjoyed – actual landscape photography shown in a contemporary exhibit. There is some hope – and it’s a show worth seeing. Ross has pushed the envelope of quality film photography in making huge – estimated to be 5 x 10 feet – color prints of a Mount Sopris in Colorado under different lighting/weather conditions. To make these extreme size prints, the photographer converted a 9 x 18 aerial camera. This show at AMOA demonstrates a new level of realism in a moving way.

On the black and white side, two series of this Austin Museum of Art show really stand out. First is a series of waves titled ‘Hurricanes’, where Ross had created super detailed 4 x 5 foot silver gelatin prints of waves breaking hear the shore of Long Island. The fast shutter speeds stop the action of the waves and water drops, recalling some of Doc Edgerton’s high speed strobe work. These are fascinating studies of the earth at work.

On the minimalist side, an intriguing series title ‘Grain’ alludes to the granular nature of film based photography. The large prints are perfect rectangles of a single color of gray, reproduced photographically by photographing directly into a light source at various exposure settings. Ross gives a good interpretation of Ansel Adam’s Zones and a reminder of the real underlying structure of B&W film photography.

Don’t miss this excellent Austin show. It runs through May 17th at AMOA, 823 Congress St., Austin.