Showing posts with label Stock Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stock Photography. Show all posts

May 24, 2014

From Making Civil War Swords to Protesting Monsanto GMOs: What These Old Trees Have Seen


On this international day of protest against the Monsanto corporation's production of Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) and chemical farming products, activists gathered in front of Chicopee (Mass.) City Hall to voice their opposition to Monsanto.

Bee Against Monsanto
The protestors claim that Monsanto products release neonicontinoids and other chemicals into the environment that are reportedly toxic to bees.

Across the street from the event stand the Cabotville Sycamores (one shown here, big white trunk).  During their close to 200 year tenure, they have seen a canal dug, a rail line laid, a city developed and industrial factories built.  Swords for Lincoln's troops, doors for the Capital in Washington, D.C. and Spaulding basketballs have all been made here in the Ames complex, the brick of which you can glimpse through the trees.

Despierta!    Dile "No" a Monsanto    Coma Organico
Patricia Sanchez lives in the former mill complex, now converted to apartments.  She holds the sign written in Spanish that reads in English "Wake up! Say No to Monsanto. Eat Organic."

Thinking about all that these trees have seen, from making swords to protesting GMOs, I felt kinship with my writer and photographer friend Benjamin Swett and his book:  New York City of Trees.  Swett writes in the introduction:

"Just as trees remove carbon from the atmosphere and hold it for many years in their woody tissue, so do they sequester the shared experiences of the people who live alongside them. The growth rings of trees contain, in organized fashion, physical manifestations of the world and of the human presence in it at different times in a tree’s history."

GMOs Have Got to Go

Several families came to protest.  Here, Kayden Beaulieu holds a Caique Parrot (the pet of another protestor) as her grandmother Nina Renshaw looks on.  Later, young Kayden walked to her car chanting, "Hey Hey Ho Ho, GMOs Have Got to Go", evidence that she had done some sequestering of her own during the event.

Anonymous
Jessiem, sporting a sign emblazoned with "Reality = Illusion", took a moment to commune with his smart phone.  I asked him about the mask.  "The government is hiding stuff from us, why not hide our identity?"

Diversity


The group was mixed, likely brought together by a Facebook event.  While the Massachusetts legislature is contemplating passing a GMO labeling law, one protestor's sign read:  "Don't label GMOs.  Ban Them!"
Beekeeper says, "Monsanto is a Buzz Kill"
Linda Buckburn's bees have not been affected by Colony Collapse Disorder that some attribute to pesticides, but she advocates natural rather than chemical farming methods.

A plaque near the Cabotville Sycamores states, "The sycamores have survived hurricanes, floods, an industrial revolution and the onslaught of modern urbanization."  The protestors prod us to wonder if the venerable trees can survive the environmental impact of modern farming methods.

October 18, 2012

Metaphorical Mental Ladders


I can clearly remember the clang of a riot cop's baton striking the aluminum ladder carried by fellow photojournalist Rick Friedman as years ago we covered neo-Nazis exercising their right to free speech in Boston.  I also remember the same cop taking aim and hitting the bone at the joint of my right knee.  I guess Rick and I needed such encouragement to move back from the action.

Acknowledging Honks
Why was Rick carrying a ladder?  Anything to get a different angle on things.  I thought of Rick as I brought my ladder to get a fresh viewpoint on the picket line of union nurses staging an one day strike in early October protesting an impasse in contract talks with Baystate Franklin Medical Center in Greenfield, MA.

Quite a thing for nurses to go on strike.  The nurses told me that the offered contract will adversely affect patient care given the terms related to overtime pay and sick time guidelines.

Dog's Eye View


I have no idea what the contract issues really are, nor what a just resolution would be.  However, it is clear that both sides have very different points of view.  With this shot, I crouched down for a low angle of registered nurse Karen Boyden leading chants.

Viewpoints.  Points of view.  Angles.  Stances.  Sides.  Perhaps we all need to carry metaphorical mental ladders to aid understanding those who think differently from the way we do. 

July 25, 2011

The Sounds of a Quiet Ride in a Chevy Volt




It was so much fun to take a ride in a Chevy Volt with Watson Collins of Northeast Utilities.

Electric Motor Quiet, Gas Generator Not As
A Chevy Volt has a gas generator (left) that creates electricity to run the electric motor (right) when car's rechargeable battery is depleted.  

Firing Up
Northeast Utilities - Western Massachusetts Electric Company has begun installing plug-in electric vehicle (EV) charging stations in order to study how the recharging affects the company's distribution of electricity.

Traveler and Auto Can Recharge Overnight
Officials from the utility company had a Chevy Volt dual gas - electric car on hand to demonstrate how the charging system works at a charging station at the Courtyard Marriott in Hadley, Massachusetts.  The hotel sees the charging station as a way of providing "cutting edge" services to its guests.

Universal
Inserting this plug into an Electric Vehicle connects the vehicle to a charging station.

Responding to the green marketing claims of the Chevy Volt and Nissan Leaf manufacturers, a friend's elementary school daughter pointed out that generating the electricity to charge the vehicles still creates pollution. Her solution went something like this: Perhaps the old mills along rivers could generate electricity for the cars.

These still images and more are available for licensing at The Image Works.

May 27, 2011

I Spent the Day Photographing with Sam Abell, Jay Maisel and Hundreds of Hallmark Students


What a day! A dream photography workshop!

Sign of the Times
Now, well, er, um, I was not actually physically present with all these photographers, but their spirits were with me.

Harbor Wharf
Along with industry legend Jay Maisel, National Geographic photographer Sam Abell regularly speaks at Hallmark Institute of Photography, where I teach.  During a recent talk Abell delighted in stories detailing his approach of first framing a scene, and then waiting patiently for wonderful events to unfold that add life, complexity and depth to the final image.

"Old Ironsides" Needs Additional Protection in the New World


I imagined Abell's soothing voice in my head, narrating with mounting interest the layers of meaning and metaphor that emerged as I worked towards this picture of the USS Constitution in Boston, Massachusetts.  The vessel is nicknamed "Old Ironsides," as attacker's cannonballs used to bounce off the ship's wooden hull.

A fence mounted on the pontoons protects this oldest commissioned warship in the U.S. Navy from attacks by sea.  I photographed workers posting signs on the fence: U.S. Navy Restricted Area - Use Of Force Authorized

Shadowy terrorists with plastic explosives replacing known foes with cannonballs makes for a world far different from George Washington's, who ordered the ship's construction.
 
Each morning at 8:00 a blank cannon round is fired, followed by raising Old Glory as The Star-Spangled Banner plays.  This salute ritual commenced in 1798 and recently came under fire as nearby condo owners complained about the noise.

Rush Hour

Leaving the Navy Yard, on my way to the North End, Boston's Italian neighborhood, I stopped to photograph a contemporary ritual:  morning bumper to bumper traffic flowing over the Zakim bridge into Boston.  Like Harbor Wharf above, this is an in-camera multiple exposure.

Thinking like a photojournalist, I wanted to capture the diesel coating on this school bus.  I followed it through the streets,  jumping out of my car at stoplights to shoot.

Light, Color, Gesture


The situation evoked Jay Maisel speaking about seeing an ephemeral scene and the "terror" of trying to catch the light, subject matter and moment, before it melts away forever.   My resulting image was more art than journalism.  Maisel's recipe for creating a memorable photograph: Light, Color and Gesture.  (Gesture does not have to be human.  It can be a light that is on, for example.)

il Tricolore


The bus led me into the heart of the North End and a free parking space.  Into my fifth year of teaching, I have graded hundreds of assignments and carried out numerous critiques.  Teaching is a good method for improving your own photography.

This is why I say that my students accompanied me on this day of shooting, as echoes of my comments on their work swirled in my consciousness:  fill the frame with storytelling details, avoid bright areas in the corners, be in charge of where you want your viewer's eye to go, learn the rules so you can consciously break them, work each subject thoroughly, get close...


With my students, I try to simultaneously nurture their raw creative fire while pointing them in a intentional, commercial direction.

Mangia - Mangia


My stock photography editor at Photolibrary, Phyllis Giarnese "joined" the crowd on today's photographic outing as well.  Giarnese manages to simultaneously nurture my fine art eye while encouraging me to shoot in a more commercially viable manner.  Add human narrative to your solitary visions.

I hope that she will be interested in marketing these three North End vignettes.

Behind the statue of Paul Revere, the North Church peeks out from the mist.

Tweet if by Land, and Facebook if by Sea
He said to his friend, "If the British march
By land or sea from the town to-night,
Hang a lantern aloft in the belfry arch
Of the North Church tower as a signal light,--
One if by land, and two if by sea;
And I on the opposite shore will be,
Ready to ride and spread the alarm
Through every Middlesex village and farm,
For the country folk to be up and to arm."

From Paul Revere's Ride
by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Texting No. 2
I am fascinated and concerned by the ubiquity of hand-held mobile screens.  Note the iPadus Americanus with Paul Revere and these Harvard University seniors waiting for a shuttle bus.

Inside Outside

My day ended with a superb ice cream cone from J.P. Licks:  Coffee Oreo and Chocolate M&M.

And this post ends with a big thanks to Sam, Jay, Phyllis and all my students.


January 18, 2011

New Year's Resolution: Spend Less Time on the Computer


If aliens landed on Earth they would assume that humans worship glowing screens.

Facebook as Religion


Over the holidays I saw a man walking through a mall in Boston, lovingly cradling his iPad, looking at the screen with reverence and love, oblivious to reality taking place around him.

I find this approach living troubling and distressing.  It's akin to reality TV - sitting and watching other people live their lives rather than having a life yourself.

Immaculate Connection

I know it is ironic to announce this on the web, but I have decided to spend less time in cyberspace.

I am looking forward to writing fewer blog posts and more letters, spending fewer lunch breaks in front of a screen and more outside, and embracing the here and now of physical reality rather than an untouchable cyber one.

November 4, 2010

Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin' - Progressive Abstraction


Look | Sensory Inspiration

When photographic legend Jay Maisel speaks where I teach, he refers to the "terror" of seeing something wonderful, but missing the shot.

Centerline
When I drove over the ridge yesterday morning and saw this sky, my adrenaline began pumping as I raced through the town of Turners Falls to get to my "spot" along the Connecticut River. A cigarette-smoking, cell phone-yakking, crossing-the-street-without-looking teenager slowed my progress.

Music For My Eyes

Park. Open trunk. Retrieve camera. Check ISO. Check white balance. Assess exposure. Take a shot. Check histogram. Climb down riverbank to water's edge.

Like Butter
The files came out of my camera looking like this.

Tech Tips: Nikon D700, Nikkor 24-70 mm, ISO 200.  My shutter speeds progressively slowed, from 1/60 to 1/13 to 1/2, and with Music for My Eyes and Like Butter I moved my camera progressively faster during the exposures. ©2010 John Nordell

October 22, 2010

"Light is metaphor. Light is knowledge, light is life, light is light.”


Enjoy | Delight in Life

“Ever since we crawled out of that primordial slime, that’s been our unifying cry, 'More light.' Sunlight. Torchlight. Candlelight. Neon, incandescent lights that banish the darkness from our caves to illuminate our roads, the insides of our refrigerators. Big floods for the night games at Soldier’s field. Little tiny flashlights for those books we read under the covers when we’re supposed to be asleep. Light is more than watts and footcandles. Light is metaphor. Light is knowledge, light is life, light is light.”  

Earth, Water and Flora
I was down by the Deerfield River in Shelburne Falls, Mass.  The sun had yet to rise, so I experimented with technique to make the most of the flat light.

Dans le Style des Impressionnistes
Eventually golden sunlight struck a nearby ridgetop.  I stood on a midriver rock to capture the moment when the glow crawled down to meet the water's edge.

Contact
Minutes later, I noticed my shadow on the next rock over.  "Where is that light coming from," I wondered.  "It is reflecting off something?"  You know, the way sunlight can glint off a passing car and travel through a coffee shop's windows to briefly illuminate the darkened interior?

My Shadow
I turned around:

Primordial
The fresh Autumn air, the burble of the river, the warming sun, the vivid color:  all brought me into an exhilarating moment. 

Light is Life
The river and I emitted misty exhalations.

Tech Tips: Nikon D700, Nikkor 24-70 mm, ISO range 200-640.  Earth, Water and Flora is an in-camera multiple exposure treated with Topaz Adjust, a plug-in filter for Photoshop CS5.   ©2010 John Nordell

July 16, 2010

I Found the Process of Entering this Juried Art Competition Delightfully Rewarding


Look | Sensory Inspiration

(I am mailing today my submission for the Franklin County Biennial inaugural juried fine art exhibition.  The theme is Confluence.  Click images to enlarge.

My friend and teaching colleague Peter Chilton designed the Biennial's website and logo.  Take a look.  His keen and creative input has greatly influenced the design of this site.  Thank you Pete!)

I moved to Franklin County 4 years ago and was immediately taken with the land:  abundant rivers, sublime cornfields and trail-laced ridges.  I feel expansiveness, openness, greater than in Boston or the city's suburbs where I had previously made homes.

I came to teach photography after two decades of work, primarily as a photojournalist.  Freed from the dictates of assignment editors, I found myself experimenting with techniques.

My experiments refined into a series of Reality-Based Abstractions, which are digital multiple exposures.  As the image combining occurs in-camera, the raw files that emerge are flat and gray looking.  I use a computer darkroom to reveal rich detail, texture and color.

Railroad Bridge
Railroad Bridge is one of these abstractions.  Bicycles whir along where trains serving the mills used to rumble.  What's next for this transportation corridor?

Confluences
This bike path bridge is at left in Confluences.  Beyond the beauty of the literal confluence of the Connecticut and Deerfield rivers, the work addresses evolving image-making technology.  The top image was taken with a digital camera.  Digital grants the freedom to explore without concern for processing costs.  I shot the bottom image with a plastic, no-settings film camera.  I use it mindfully, not clicking the shutter unless the scene is just right.  I delight in the decidedly un-digital grain and blemishes.

Natural Roots
The South River flows through horse powered Natural Roots farm in Conway before later joining the Deerfield River.  Farmer David Fisher drives a team of four workhorses, pulling a harrow.  The spinning discs neutralize weeds by turning them into the soil.

Horse manure fertilizes the fields.  Hay and vegetables grow.  Hay fuels the horses.  The beautiful cycle of traditional, non-fossil fuel farming. 

Currents of the past and future gleaned from living life along Franklin County rivers swirl through my soul and fuel my artistic vision.

(P.S. Thank you Langston Hughes for your poem: 
The Negro Speaks of Rivers.)

June 24, 2010

Life's a Beach - And a Bitch


Look | Sensory Inspiration

If I am at the beach I am in the water.  Even if the temperature is, well, overly refreshing.

Beach Fences
The cold water shock followed by hot sun warming set my vision alive.

The View From Here
What's right with this picture?  I am at the beach... working!  Nothing like shooting first person stock photography. The image title comes from the name of my photo-consultant friend Selina Maitreya's audio business guide for photographers.

Chillin
Lifeguards Kevin Aufiero and Brendan Adams survey Duxbury (Mass.) Beach.  As I endeavored to fill my frame with storytelling details, I thought of two photographer friends, both facing the death of family members.  As I strained to compose so that Mr. Aufiero's nose crested the horizon line, salty tears rolled down my salty cheeks.  And as I shot a burst of frames to catch sunbathers walking up the ramp, I dedicated this image to my grieving photo buddies.

Tech Tips: Nikon D700, 24-70mm, ISO 200. Beach Fences is an in-camera multiple exposure treated with Topaz Adjust, a plug-in for Photoshop CS4.  ©2010 John Nordell

June 16, 2010

Adventures in Location Lighting: Photo Studio in a Car


Create | Bring Into Being

The remains of life had been accumulating on the dashboard of my car.

Delicate Seed
A dandelion puff, a mussel shell, a dried pea pod, sunflower seeds, burrs, a maple seed and a butterfly's wing formed the collection.

Fractal Wings
The day before this shoot, late light raked through my car's interior giving the items glow.  I had the light, but not the time.

Dashboard Diffusion


The next morning, I drove my car around an empty parking lot, angling it just so to mimic the light I had seen the evening before. I used a paper napkin to diffuse direct sunlight coming in from the right.

Like a Shell and Seeds on a Pod
 Placing these items on my pant leg added just the right background texture.

Inside Looking Through
Light is the currency of photography.  A little napkin helped me get paid.

Tech Tips: Nikon D700, 60mm 2.8 Micro Nikkor, ISO from 200-800.  With Fractal Wings I used the following technique:  Try removing your lens (best is a fixed focal length), set the aperture to wide open, hold lens close to the camera, experiment with angling the lens slightly and use shutter speed for proper exposure. ©2010 John Nordell

June 3, 2010

Ever Wonder What it is Like Being a Zoo Animal?


Enjoy | Delight in Life

One of my stock agency editors asked for travel images.  Kids at landmarks with cameras.  Found this shot at the Franklin Park Zoo in Boston, MA.

Tiger Hunting










"What a picture! Oh, that is perfect." A gorilla is right up by the exhibit's glass and am I trying to concentrate on taking a picture while this cameraless guy behind me yaks to the world at large.  "That is going to be great. What a picture. What a situation! It is perfect!"

Looking at Self
Peacocks strut free around the zoo as if they own it.

Peacock
This one stood still as I got close and overlapped multiple exposures.


Spiked Zoo Gate


Making the most of flat light and a gray sky, I intentionally overexposed the image and converted it to black and white to achieve this look.

I wonder what it is like looking out from behind the bars, studying gawking human specimens.

I also wonder about human similarities with zoo animals, how we can be caged by our preconceptions of others, for example, or let fears shutter our creativity. 

Do you see any connections?

TechTalk: Nikon D700, 24-70mm, ISO range 160-320. Peacock is an in-camera multiple exposure treated with Topaz Adjust, a plug-in for Photoshop. Grayscale conversions in Lightroom. ©2010 John Nordell

April 22, 2010

Destination Dia: Beacon - Part 1


Enjoy | Delight in Life

I set off with Dia:Beacon as my destination. Dia:Beacon is a huge contemporary art museum housed in a former Nabisco cookie box printing plant in Beacon, NY. The institution has anchored the economic rebound of the once thriving industrial town. On my way, I stopped in Winsted, CT for a snack. I noted many empty mill buildings, signs of former manufacturing activity. Learning that an artist had plans for massive 3D mural in Winsted depicting US industrial history, I wondered how an arts centered creative economy could impact Winsted.

Pins, clocks, socks, blenders, toasters, scythes, silk, wire, coffin hardware, ribbon candy, hoes and more, were all manufactured in Winsted.


Once Water Powered


Winsted, CT

Bob Moore's real estate office is on Main Street. His business is going strong as Connecticut and New York families tied to the sports schedules of their children eschew weekend/vacation homes on distant Cape Cod and instead buy properties situated on the area's lakes. However, as far as the town: "It is dying for a developer to come through and resurrect the dead."


Real Estate Agent

Behind Mr. Moore is a factory building owned by Ralph Nader, where the consumer advocate plans to establish The American Museum of Tort Law. The institution may draw visitors to Winsted, Mr. Nader's home town.

 Sock Factory

Milly Hudek runs The Historical Society in Winsted like a tight ship. These socks on display were made at the Winsted Hosiery Company, the smokestacked mill in the photograph.

The building exteriors look much the same then as now.


Once Factories, Now Artist Studios and Apartments

Inside is a different story. Though a lingering smell of machine oil evokes industrial days, the former site of the Winsted Hosiery Company houses artist studios and small businesses.


Artist

Visual artist, painter and teacher Gay Schempp notes the "odd smells, fabulous light and cheap rent. The pros outweigh the cons." She is a member of The Artists @ Whiting Mills. From the group's mission statement: "Our goal is to give members' work exposure and to enrich our community with our combined talents and skills."


Repurposing

The building comes alive when the artists hold their open studios. The community college in town is expanding. Yet more needs to be done to fill the remaining mills and vacant Main Street store fronts with economic activity.

© 2010 John Nordell