Posts Tagged ‘Photography’

Some baby with a little dog on the side.

April 18, 2009  |  Life  |  1 Comment  | 

I am helping a friend tomorrow with a photography shoot of some soccer teams.  Pretty much all I’ve done in the past is studio photography and this is a bit different.  It’s outside and all large groups and singles.  Overall, probably a lot easier than taking portraits of infants except that you are doing a lot more people in a shorter amount of time.

Anyway, I needed to get familiar with the camera and he brought it by today.  I didn’t have too much time to set up anything elaborate, but I had some fun with my little guy (and Dugal).

The Incident – A Short Story.

February 28, 2009  |  Humor, Life  |  4 Comments  | 

Adam was an odd child.  It’s hard to say exactly what made him odd.  In our day and age we could probably contrive at least twenty seven different things that might have caused his particular brand of oddity.  It wasn’t that he looked somehow different.  With large bright eyes peering out from under a dark mop of hair and an inquisitive nature, he was a pretty decent looking kid.

Now, I was a bit of an explorer as a kid.  I loved the deep dark places where I could imagine monsters hid ready to pounce upon us.  Inside, I knew it was all imagination.  But to play out these fantasies and rescue the damsel in distress was a highlight of my childhood.  I collected baseball cards.  Adam collected old keys.

There was an old abandoned house on our street back then, and when we were about 11 years old, we finally became just rebellious enough of our parents that we made this house a hideout.  Nothing was ever really said, but we knew it was off limits.  Unfortunately, an old house covered in vines and reeking of untold history holds a special place in the heart of a young boy.  Oh the wonders we could imagine.  Pirate ships, dungeons, war ravaged apocalypses where we were the only survivors… our imaginations would often run away with us till it was almost dark.

There was a new spot that we found one summer day.  Outside the house, buried under a fallen log, and half hidden in vines was a cellar door.  Locked.  It became a bit of an obsession. What lay beneath those doors?  Some beast locked away?  A buried treasure?  The zombified remains of the house’s previous occupants?

Our first and most immediate response to this dilemma was to break in the door and explore the till now secret passage.  You see, beyond imagination there is a place where every boy loves one thing.  It is undeniable.  It is almost a form of worship.  Destruction.  We fell to with reckless abandon trying to get into that door.  We cleared away the tangle of vines and moss, and beat it with sticks and rocks, making quite a ruckus I assure you.  Well, obviously… because mom found out about it and grounded me for a week and told me not to go back to the house.

Adam was grounded too.  Unfortunately and unlike me, he also acquired a large amount of poison ivy.  So with my week up, and a mystery yet unsolved, I ran to Adam’s house where we could talk over our options.  He pulled out his key collection.

Over the last year of playing in the house he had found a treasure trove of keys to add to his collection.  Each time he would find a new key, he added it to his ever growing collection.  There were hundreds of keys now.  Old keys, skeleton keys, oddly shaped keys that used to go to vending machines.  The only option was to take them all to the door.  I said “the door” with an ominous sounding tone.  Adam couldn’t go with me.  His poison ivy rash would probably get worse if he even dared to go near the door.  Apparently he was more allergic than he first thought.

So holding the tin of keys and running as fast as I could, I made my way to the house.  To the door waiting there like some fairy tale.  Like the mines in the fantastical stories I read.  I became the hero.  The one who would brave the fierce consequences and rescue the princess, or set the foul beast upon myself unwittingly.  The martyr.

Most keys didn’t fit.  I went through them all one by one.  Nope.  No.  That one fits, but doesn’t turn.  Not that one either.  Finally, with seven keys left, I found one.  It slid into the rusty lock.  I knew this must be it.  Clicking into place, I gently turned the key.  It moved just a little then stuck.  My heart dropped.  Then I forced the key a little.  It broke free of the rust and turned the rest of the way.

Jubilantly, reverently, I removed the key and stuck it into my pocket.  I gathered up the other keys and put them back into the tin and set them down.  The excitement of this moment was intense.  I felt like a warrior about to go into battle.  I grabbed the largest stick I could carry to use as a weapon and began opening the old cellar door.

With creaks and groans that set my mind ablaze with creatures great and fierce, the door opened.  I let it crash into the poison ivy as it fell off it’s rusted hinges.  The light streamed down into that dark hole.  There was water.  Maybe about six inches deep, but it became the dungeon.  I would brave it all.  Step by step, I lowered myself into the secret place.  Water dripping in the distance.  A musty odor that would almost knock you over.  I imagined it was dragon’s breath.  I lifted my sword that my stick had suddenly become and trudged into the depths.

There were shelves going off into little alcoves on either side of a main walkway.  Broken jars, old metal cans, an old tire and a broken wheelbarrow.  I looked into each little area before I moved on.  Suddenly, something moved.  The water splashed around me.  Squeals of an angry beast pierced my ears.  A foul odor erupted and I couldn’t see.  I lept back toward the entrance crying, scared.  I fell up the stairs, grasping clawing for a breath of fresh air, scraping my knees on the steps, covered in muddy water and dirt.  I made my way to the top and ran to the old wrought iron fence that bordered the property.

I caught sight of my dark hair and fearfully large eyes in an old broken window as I stopped and gathered my thoughts.  My arms suddenly burning with irritation, I scratched them raw with my fingernails. I had forgotten the keys by the door.  “I’ll go back and get them later.”

Suddenly it was clear what had happened to me.  A frightened skunk had let loose with the horrible odor.  The splashing was an attempt to get away.  I had scared it as much as it had scared me.

The events of that day would haunt me the rest of my life.  I never went back for my collection of keys.  I am sure they rusted away or were swept up in the debris when the house was eventually torn down.  My poison ivy got worse till mom took me to the doctor, which was several days after the smell of the skunk lessened. Mom was faced with the awful paradox of grounding a boy who smelled like skunk after she heard the whole story.  I was grounded to the yard and couldn’t leave it for two weeks.  Those two weeks in the heat of summer was horrible punishment for a boy who had poison ivy as bad as I had it after the incident.

I am not as odd as I once was.

Non-Profit Photography Studio

February 25, 2009  |  Art, Christianity  |  No Comments  | 

I am working on putting together a non-profit photography studio in a church setting.  I am wanting some feedback about questions or concerns you might have regarding a free photography studio.

SOME BACKGROUND:
My wife and I have both worked with Olan Mills & Sears Portrait Studios over the last few years as portrait photographers.  My background is in Ministry as a full-time pastor and youth pastor.  Photography was something we both fell into and loved once we began doing it.

HOW IT WOULD WORK:

Basically the arrangement would be as follows.

We would schedule and perform the sitting like we have in the past with Olan Mills or Sears Portrait Studios.  Once we take the images, sit down and go through them with you and edit the images.  Once you are happy with the images, we burn these to a cd with a letter of copyright (walmart is notorious for not letting people print anything they don’t have a letter of copyright for).

A tip jar would also be provided to help us continue providing the ministry (ie. buying cd’s, upgrading equipment, replacing flash bulbs, and pocket money for the photographer).  Giving is completely optional and at your own discretion.

At this point we would also give you some information about the church and invite you to try us out if you do not already have a church home.

QUESTIONS:

  • How likely would you be to go to a photography studio in a church for free portraits?
  • Would you be willing to return regularly and tell friends about it if the photographer does a great job?
  • How often would you take advantage of free studio portraits on a cd?
  • If you did not feel pressured about attending on a Sunday morning, would you still think about at least trying out the church on a Sunday morning?
  • Does a non-profit photography studio convey that we care about you as a person/as a family?  If not, how could we make this idea better?

Combining Photography and Ministry

February 4, 2009  |  Christianity, Creativity, Family, Life  |  2 Comments  | 

s41081ca122087_34_0I recently shared with a friend of mine who is a pastor a vision I have for bringing portrait photography into their ministry as an innovative way of reaching out to our community.

My background and calling is full-time ministry.  Right now, it’s hard to make that happen.  Most churches are having just as tough of a time making ends meet as individuals are.  Personally, I was one of the pastors who due to financial cuts suffered the brunt of a churches financial crises.  Since I enjoyed photography, I looked for a job doing photography.  If I had had the monetary support and a place to work, I would probably own my own studio at this point and be doing photography on my own.  I currently work for Olan Mills and volunteer at my church.

My recent vision for combining photography and ministry was a bit of a surprise even to me.  I have customers come in each and every day at Olan Mills with Newborns, or 1 year olds.  I even once had an elderly lady come in and buy one portrait just so that her family could have something to display at her funeral.

Photography is one of those things where we see a large number of people come in with very open hearts and minds to what God might be saying to them.  They are celebrating a birth, or their family, or just a memory… leaving a legacy.

At a commercial photography studio it’s often hard to witness when you know that at the end of the session, you are going to be trying to sell them a package, even if they can’t afford it.  Serve God or money, right?

But the church has a huge opportunity here.  I’ve pitched it to my church and have some support for making it happen, now I just need the means to get the equipment to make it a reality.

image credit – Becca and Me with our little one, Aidan

Doggy Demands

February 2, 2009  |  Family, Humor, comic  |  1 Comment  | 

doggy-demands

I Want to Be a Clone

January 30, 2009  |  Humor, Music  |  No Comments  | 

The origins of the name “decloned” for this site in truth come from a song by Christian Artist Steve Taylor.  I wonder if Steve still has that “On the Fritz” suit.

ASBO Jesus hit on the same topic today, so I thought I’d share the video to spur on the discussion.

1984 Concert

2003 Concert

Find pot or your grandparents on Google

January 30, 2009  |  Family, Humor, Life  |  1 Comment  | 

While recently police found a field of pot plants using Google Earth, I recently was surprised when I found my grandparents on Google Maps – Street View.

cbk

My Grandpa pulls the car down to the sidewalk so my grandma can get into the car, then walks her to the car.  I think they are on their way to church when Google drove by.

Frozen Morning

January 28, 2009  |  Uncategorized  |  No Comments  | 

img_3862The trees outside our apartment are suffering the brunt of the ice.

The Art and Theology Discussion

December 19, 2008  |  Art, Christianity, Creativity  |  3 Comments  | 

There’s been a bit of a discussion going on in the art & theology blogging world about the (to use Casey’s term) “nexus” between the two.  I feel obliged to participate considering my last work “The Gospel of John. The Cross of Christ.” and the overall nature of my blog sometimes being completely art and sometimes completely theology (and sometimes something completely different).  I never seem to be able to separate the two.  Maybe you’ll understand why through this post, but first off I must tell you I am approaching it first through scripture, then through art.  It is only through these two lenses that theology really ever comes into focus.

John 1:3  – “Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made.”

John makes his first few statements in his version of the gospel very cosmological including using the same wording as Genesis 1:1 “In the beginning…”

Where Genesis states “In the beginning God created the Heavens and the earth”  John equates the method of creation as something spoken.  The Word became flesh.

So when we see that John also includes this one particular narrative that is existent in some of the later manuscripts of John’s Gospel, it fits in nicely. Oh yeah, it’s the story where the woman is caught in adultery and Jesus stoops down and draws in the sand.  We don’t know what He wrote (or had drawn), but I think Michael Card has this spot on in the following song.

Art is one way God intimately shares part of who He is with us.  Being made in the image of God, we also are creators.  Worship being one of the main purposes of our particular creation, we can give back to God in a way that is more intimate, through a process of creating something completely of our own free will.  But since our free will can also choose rebellion, we can create wicked works as well.

Casey has asked me to respond to his 10 Theses on Art from a Christian Perspective. On some I agree completely, some only in part, and some I may disagree completely.  Keep in mind this is a discussion, not a flame contest.  Casey is a great guy and I respect him very much as an artist and as a fellow believer. I will also confess I had to look up words like “didactic” to even hope to respond semi-intelligently.  ;)   But for my reader’s sake here, I’ll use “lehmans” terms…

“As iron sharpens iron, so one man sharpens another.”  – Proverbs 27:17

  • Art (etymology=artifice,artificial) is a visual, organic parable. Emotional and conceptual aspects of art are of the soul. Auto-didactic art remains a function of nature.

Too often I think we use the word “nature” without equating it to a particular nature.  Eden was perfect nature, being made “good” from the standpoint of God.  After the fall of man we see imperfect nature as part of the curse.  One is pure.  One has a twisted element that resides in it.  If art inherent in “the creation” is a visual, organic parable of God’s then I would completely agree.  Romans 1:20 would be my basis of this statement.  “For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that men are without excuse.”

What happens is the above statement breaks down in this analysis.  Art is visual, organic and based out of emotion, even if we deny it to be so.  Even what seems to be “Auto-didactic”  from our point of view is planned, purposeful and providential.

  • Sacred art is a category of art that involves subject. If art were, or could be, “Sacred,” the Lord Jesus would have drawn the gospel.

Isn’t that why He created the monks and their illuminated manuscripts?  Seriously though, I would go the other way and say that Sacred art is that which is inspired by The Creator.  In scriptures, we see poetry & songs.  I would suppose if it were deemed relevant for us to have visual arts beyond what nature provides, that there would have been visual arts as well.

  • At some point, content must always supersede subject in art. Content is the construct and concept of the artist.

I agree.  Otherwise the art is completely irrelevant and meaningless.  It’s creation is in itself due to the free will of the artist.  It must become it’s own apart from it’s subject, but in doing so becomes the subject of the creator.

  • Nature is corrupt, but art may rise above nature inasmuch as it may be created in an environment of redemption.

Yet nature was not meant to be corrupt.  In our redemptive state as believers, can we create without the impact of corruption?  No, but insomuch as we come close determines the nature in us.  In this, Art also becomes reflective.

  • Making art is a creative act. Individuality is intrinsic to the making of art.

Free will.  I agree with Casey here.  God sat us down in the midst of this world and entrusted it all to us.  Our canvas never ends.  It is as wide and high as the Earth.  I think this is why I like Andy Goldsworthy’s works.

  • The need of art is an act of faith, rather than a scientific quantity.

Agreed.  Completely.

  • Truth in art is no more self-evident or intrinsic than any other act in nature. We assert that truth is resident in Jesus Christ.

Agreed.  Though, at this point I will assume you mean perfect nature (since I addressed this earlier).

  • Beauty in the classic sense is resident in nature, and therefore must be interpreted.

Why?  C.S. Lewis writes in his allegory “The Great Divorce” of a man who is entranced with painting heaven so much that he refuses to live there.  If our interpretation is all we long to do, than we might want to reevaluate our own pride that we can ever truly interpret beauty.  In our human nature, even a redemptive human nature, we still fall short of the glory of God.  Our most redemptive act then is worship.

  • Art has a long life – longer than human mortality. With perhaps the exception of performance art and conceptual art, Fine Art is a corporeal object of exceptional longevity.

Agreed.  In this it also comes closest to our own longing for Heaven and ties into what we are created to be.  We are both eternal and physical.

  • We reject the theology that God must not be represented in art. God is personal, and art is one of the many (perhaps imperfect) means of relating to Him.

Agreed.  But is is also a way He relates to us.