Results of the SlowExposures Photography Review

I want to apologize up front. This is a very long post ...Thread

So, a few weeks ago I wrote about the photography review I was going to do at SlowExposures and how nervous I was.

The list of reviewers was daunting...

Screen shot 2010-09-08 at 3.19.06 PM ... and I didn't go to art school, so I was nervous to get my first review..

It didn't really go as well as I had hoped. I have been thinking that maybe I would not share with you all how it went and just keep on pretending everything was great, but that's not really fair. So many of you took the time to help me prepare, and I really appreciate that. Also, many of you have even cared enough to check in with me and see what happened. The truth is, I was too confused to really explain the whole thing.

I'm still confused, but I have the ACP review coming up in a few weeks, and I have to sort out my thoughts on the last review so that I can go into the next one with my head held high. I might as well use this blog to figure it out, because running over and over it in my head has not been working.

I guess the best thing to do if just go through again what everybody said. I did not record the reviews, nor did I have time to take very many notes. This is the best of my recollection of what was said. If I got it wrong I am so sorry. There was a lot going on all at once...

Review # 1. Elisabeth Biondi, Visual Editor, The New Yorker.

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I really enjoyed meeting Elisabeth. She is an incredibly successful woman who obviously knows so much about art. I spent a minute reading her profile (click on her picture) and was amazed by her career.

I don't think she was really amazed by my work.

Lighthouse

This one in particular she did not really like. She suggested taking it out of the series.

stairs

I also developed a new type of printing for the series... sorry the pictures is so bad. I took it with my blackberry. Anyway, I got 3 pictures printed this way. They are printed on acetate and facemounted to acrylic. The result is this sort of light-box effect. I was so excited to show the pieces. woops.

Elisabeth said that these looked like Sepia, which is the type of printing where all the blacks are turned to brown. You see it in a lot of old-timey (word?) pictures... or those photo booths at fairs where you dress up in western wear and they photograph you. Anyway, Elisabeth DOES NOT like Sepia. I think her words were that it was a cheap trick.

The thing is though, this was not Sepia. It is actually black. Maybe something in the printing made it sort of turn to that Sepia color. I thought about telling her to was really black ink, but it wouldn't have mattered. She was not a fan.

Review # 2. John Bennette - Collector and Curator

I can't find a picture of him. Sorry :(

Let me tell you, before we went into the review we were all having lunch and he told us that in past reviews he had actually told people that the needed to stop photographing.... like literally put away their camera and not do it anymore.

So, I sat down with him and he said something like, "why are you here?" Well... I started to talk but nothing came out (must have been my shaking)... so I drank some water and said something like... "because I want to be a photographer more than anything in the world... and not just any photographer, but the most amazing fine art photographer ever..." (totally pathetic, I know ... I need to work on that before my next review). I think I ended by saying something like "You can't tell me to stop taking pictures because I can't" ... whew... I am just sounding better and better, aren't I? I'm sure he was trying not to laugh.

Kate Lifting grave

The first thing he said was that I needed to find a different way to print the photos. The ones that were not printed on the acetate were printed on a pearl paper. He DID NOT LIKE the fact that he could see himself in the paper. His advice was that when he was looking at photographs he wanted to be totally in the fantasy and believe in the photograph. Anything that distracted him from the fantasy (like his reflection) took him out of the photograph and back to reality, which he did not like. That makes a lot of sense to me.

Kate and Statue

The photos were all mounted and cut down to size, and the sizes were all different. A note to all photographers who have never been to a review: don't print the photos in a lot of different sizes, don't trim the photos down, and don't bring a metal box!

Just Ghost (1)

He asked me about this piece and I told him that I was an architectural photographer. He said he could see that and wished I had brought more of that to show (ouch!).

Ghost through arch

He gave me some great advice though, and I really appreciate it. He was concerned about the costumes. He said they looked out of place. The twin who was alive was in modern clothes and the ghost twin was in a dress that looked like it was from the 1800s. He asked me why. I really did not have a great answer. I had some issues with costume while I was on the shoot. We thought the silver dress could work for 1920s... and that maybe the bridal gown could also pass for that period. He thought it was a little cliched .... like that was what a ghost was supposed to look like. I can see that.

Review # 3 Sylvia Plachy - Photographer

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Sylvia Plachy is actually Adrien Brody's mom! She was just so nice. She's such a talented photographer, and was really a delight during the review process.

I was thinking this would be it... my good review. It turns out she was not too much of a fan either. She also did not like the different sizes or the pearl paper. Everyone was pretty much suggesting that they needed to be printed on matt paper (in the process of doing that right now.)

kate on a grave The costumes were also very distracting to her. And, if I remember correctly, I think she thought the photographs were stronger when it was just about the ghost, and not so much about the dead twin sister... I think that's a valid point... that way it could be more about the architecture and the ghost. It takes it away from the less convincing narrative of the two sisters where one of them died.

By the end of this interview I was really feeling pretty down. Nobody had told me to throw my camera away or anything, but the news wasn't good. I was thinking that the best idea was to scrap what I had and maybe either start over, or just move on completely.

Thus far the best part of the day was that I didn't cry... which is actually a huge achievement. The whole drive up there I talked on the phone with my mom. I was so afraid I was going to crack. Nobody had ever said anything really critical of my photography before, and I was so afraid that I would hear one negative thing and just give up... but you know what? I didn't! I actually went back in for more!

Review # 4 Brett Levine

Screen shot 2010-10-04 at 4.34.00 PM And finally there was some light at the end of the tunnel, and his name was Brett Levine. I would have hugged him if I hadn't just met him!

night photo

Here is my favorite thing that he said (sorry if it's not exact), "You do not want to be seen as a Southern girl who photographs Southern ghost stories... what if the girls were modern?"

I think the man's a genius, and I loved the way he put that. It was the perfect thing to say to me. I had been holding on to this fear that I would be seen as just that... a girl from the South photographing a story that had been told for ages. I have become captivated by this idea of making it hip, fun and modern. Wouldn't it be great? Kind of like a Tim Burton redo of the classic Alice in Wonderland (well, except for all the strange Tim Burton stuff... maybe not a great example).

pointing Brett and I spent a lot of time talking about the printing style. I think he really got what I was talking about with the light box idea. He even threw in some ideas of his own, suggesting an almost film reel way of printing things, which I have become totally obsessed with.

Review # 5 Eizabeth Turk, Professor at SCAD Screen shot 2010-10-04 at 4.44.44 PM

And because I believe all things happen for a reason, I think it was fate that I ended up with Elizabeth Turk. I was still all excited off my review with Brett. Instead of just letting her look at the photographs, I did a little more talking. I told her how the photos were not just fine art prints, but that I wanted them to be experiences.

And to show how much I had learned from Mr. Bennette, Elizabeth asked me why I was there, and I said, "Because I am an artist. It's not about the photography. It's about the art and the experience and what people bring to it." Now that is the answer I wanted to give, and I would never have gotten to it without having to answer Mr. Bennette first!

Moving on... Stair Picture

She said that this was her favorite (I think), and we used it as a sort of platform to talk about the ways I would want the photographs displayed if I could do anything I wanted. She had the most fantastic ideas, and she even wrote down an entire list of photographers for me to study. She also told me that she gets really inspired by film noir and wrote down some of her favorites.

marbles 2

My favorite thing that I took away from my talk with her is that I do not have to go through traditional methods. As those of you who read this blog know, I have been so fixated this past year on getting into a gallery I never even considered other possibilities. She suggested that I find my own space and set up my own show. That way I can to projections and video and whatever else I want to do.

You know, great minds really do think alike. Todd Murphy told me to do this the first time I met him. He said I just really needed to fine tune a series... get it to the place where I was 100% satisfied with it, and then do my own show. That way I wouldn't be constrained by what a gallery owner wants me to do... I can just do it.

Of course, it takes me hearing something more than once before I really get it. (I'm stubborn I guess, and I thought a gallery show was the only way to go.)

Now I have so many things to think about. I love Brett's idea of making it a modern day story, and I love Elizabeth's idea that I can do it myself! I'm so excited to see where it all goes!

leaves

The one problem is, of course, that now I have my ACP review this month and I have not done any more work. I have not revamped the series, but you know what I am going to do? I'm going to take the advice of all the reviewers and make all my images a uniform size, get them all printed on a nice matt paper, and get a presentation box that isn't metal!

I'm going to go in there with my head held high, because, hey, I've been through it before and I'd didn't kill me. Heck, I didn't even cry!

Thank you so much to all the reviewers for their time and expertise. I learned from every one of them, and believe me, I will never forget it!

"The Pink Castle" - House on tour October 10th

So, did anyone figure out where this living room from yesterday's post was from?

It's from Glennis Beacham's listing at 3418 Pinestream Road.

Yesterday I said that this was a Philip Shutze home, but I was actually wrong. I have written about this home before, here. Screen shot 2010-05-03 at 2.07.26 PM

In that post I said "The home was designed by Hentz, Reid & Adler in the early 1920s when the team included Neel Reid, Philip Shutze, Lewis Crook, Earnest Ivey and James Means. Historians agree Philip Shutze did the lion's share of the work and it is considered his "first house," according to this page from House Beautiful in September 1978."

Screen shot 2010-05-03 at 1.26.17 PM Well, I was wrong. According to J. Neel Reid Architect, this home, The Andrew Calhoun Estate, was Hentz, Reid & Adler's job number 396. Reid got the job through his relationship with Mrs. Calhounn the Peachtree garden Club. After Reid had gotten the job for the Calhoun Estate, he went to Italy for the second time, and this time he took Lewis Edmund Crook Jr.

Screen shot 2010-05-03 at 1.25.40 PM Dining Room

While on that trip, Reid and Crook bought furnishings and art for the Calhoun Estate.

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According to J. Neel Reid Architect, "The working drawings, mostly dated November 1922, were prepared by Philip Shutze, Lewis Crook, James Means, and Earnest Ivey ...

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... In this project, as with others during this period of Hentz, Reid & Adler's history, there was a studio-like collaboration of artistic and practical talents ... working together with Reid and his partners to satisfy the client and the firm's architectural and aesthetic standards."

So, in the earlier post I showed you guys the exterior elements and told you a little more history about the house...

But we still have the interiors to see!

Stair Detail Main Hallway

This is a view of the main hallway. Isn't that molding surrounding the door amazing? I love how it's mirrored in the mantel beyond, which you will see in a minute.

Main Hallway 2

In this photograph you can see the original mural "Philemon and Baucis" by artist Allyn Cox. Allyn Cox also did a mural for the rotunda of the nation's capitol.

800px-Apotheosis_of_George_Washington This is a photo of the Capitol's Rotunda.

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Here is a photograph of the home's mural.

Pink rm w chandelier

This is a photograph of the drawing room, which I think could also be considered a ball room.

Ball room Detail

I love this detailing.

Porch Green rm detail

This photograph is from the glass porch just off the drawing room.

Through Green door to Pink room Through glass door in green rm

Aren't these views incredible?

Through Door

And here we are in the drawing room looking back through the central hall. The formal living room is to the left of the central hall.

Wall of back windows

here in the formal living room you can see Reid's original furnishings from his trip to Italy. MantelFireplace Living Room

This ceiling are one of my favorite parts of the house.

Dining Room

And of course we have the dining room with the roundel of Michelangelo above the fireplace.

Breakfast Room

And of course the breakfast room, which leads out to the veranda.

Open Air HallwayVanity

And finally, the powder room on the main level. gasp... so beautiful!

I hope you enjoyed seeing the inside of this living piece of Atlanta's history.

If you are interested in seeing this house in person, please come to the Beacham & Company/ Special olympics home tour on October 10th from 1-5.

You can purchase tickets here.

I hope to see you there!

-Blayne

Portfolio Review - "A Ghost Story" - Can you help me?

Hi everyone. I want to thank everyone for leaving such fantastically encouraging comments on my last post.  It's back to one blog for me! So, for my first post back under one roof, I'm writing about my new series...  :) I hope you had a fantastic Labor Day!  We went to Savannah this weekend, which was amazing... but it's not what you think.  There was no laying on the beach, eating hotdogs and drinking beer for us!  nope, we worked the whole time!  Matthew, Kate and I were working getting ready for the Slow Exposures Photography review I think there are only 10 photographers going to the review, and the reviewers are really impressive. Look!

Screen shot 2010-09-08 at 3.19.06 PM

I'm obviously nervous... which is an understatement. Actually, I have not been sleeping that well. Do you know how hard it is to come up with a unique artistic idea, develop it, and then work to execute it? Horribly difficult for me! But you know what's more difficult? Doing it on a deadline. As a person who has never finished ANYTHING until the absolute last minute, this is very stressful for me.

So this weekend was really do or die. I have been working for about a month on developing a series about a ghost. The concept has been changing and evolving... but I needed to have one before we went to Savannah.

Then, of course, when we got to Savannah the concept changed again and again based on the locations...

ghost yelling at kate

Like this for example. I did not know there was a lighthouse on Tybee Island, but when we saw it we hiked 4 miles to get this shot...

Anyway, I need about 13 shots for the review, but I have 22.

I thought I knew which photos were the best, but then as soon as I started showing them to people I realized everyone liked different shots.

Stair Picture

Like this for example. I did not think it was one of the strongest, but everyone I show it to seems to really like it...

So here is where you come in. Can you please leave a comment telling me which shots you like the most? Maybe I will be able to come to some sort of consensus...

Just Ghost (1) Flying through arch

kate flying Kate Lifting grave Hand shot kate on a grave Kate floating again marbles 2 Jar of Marbles leaves Pointing to door

Thank you so much for your opinion everyone! You have no idea how much it means to me that you take time out of your life to help with my project!

A Dream Realized + Overwhelmed with Gratitude + Opening July 29th

Walking into the unveiling of my show at Artist Trifecta last Friday was something I will never forget. Screen shot 2010-07-13 at 10.25.20 AM Almost everyone I know and love came out to support me, and I am grateful.

Screen shot 2010-07-15 at 4.41.41 PM So many members of may family came, many traveling long distances. And my uber-talented uncle Rod Collins took almost all of these photos. Isn't he talented?

There's more!  Click below to see the full story!

Screen shot 2010-07-12 at 4.42.13 PM Screen shot 2010-07-13 at 10.24.07 AM

We all huddled together inside the gallery waiting for the winner of the scavenger hunt to be announced... Screen shot 2010-07-13 at 10.24.22 AM There were huge sheets of butcher paper hung over the winning pieces, like the ones seen here behind Owen from Digital Pictures (sponsor of the event), and gallery owner Amanda Brown

At 8 o'clock the paper came down... and guess what? I won the grand prize! Screen shot 2010-07-13 at 10.24.59 AM Jocelyn Dorsey of WSB's People to People was there to hand out the prize. Read more about it here.

My dream finally came true... and it was undescribeable...

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Until I had to describe it on camera! I was so nervous and can't remember what I said, but I will find out Sunday morning at 6:30 on WSB's People 2 People. (yeaks!)

Screen shot 2010-07-13 at 10.25.40 AM

The night was better than I could have ever imagined ... and I have been imagining it, hoping for it, dreaming about it for months!

Screen shot 2010-07-13 at 10.24.29 AM

Thank you so much to my outstanding team. I am more grateful to you guys than I can even express. Thank you to Hailey Lowe and Matthew Godleski.

We were all there to celebrate together.

A special thanks to the overwhelming number of Beacham & Company agents who came!

Screen shot 2010-07-13 at 10.25.51 AM

The very talented photographer Chris Nelms and his lovely wife (owner of Virtual Studio Innovations) stopped by the event.

Screen shot 2010-07-13 at 10.26.01 AM Screen shot 2010-07-13 at 10.26.16 AM Screen shot 2010-07-13 at 10.26.40 AM Screen shot 2010-07-13 at 10.27.25 AM Screen shot 2010-07-13 at 10.27.35 AM

I also want to take a moment to all my blogging friends who came out to support me, and they even wrote about it on their blogs!

P1020919-2010-07-09-Castleberry-Stroll-Artist-Trifecta-TK-Cristi

Terry, from Architecture Tourist came and took tons of pictures. He also wrote the most flattering post about the event. Thank you so much.Screen shot 2010-07-12 at 4.42.36 PMAnd here is the ever-talented Cristi Holcombe from Charm Home. Cristi also wrote a post about the opening, and I am so grateful. I love the watermarks she put on her photos. They are su fun!

P1020936-2010-07-09-Castleberry-Stroll-Artist-Trifecta-Niki-Claire-Cristi-Terry

In this picture, taken by Terry, you can see Niki from Single Bubble Pop on the left standing next to Claire Watkins from High Gloss Blue.

Niki did one of her famous "What I Wore" posts about the event. Click the link and look at her drawing... it looks just like her!And Claire found time in her tremendously busy weekend to come to the event and write about it. Check out her post to see her "fresh look!"

I love all my talented and supportive blogging friends. Thank you so much!

And finally, thank you to Amanda Brown of Artist Trifect. You really did make my dream come true.

MORE NEWS!

Please watch WSB' People to People on Sunday morning at 6:30 to see the opening and my interview!!

We are having another private opening on July 29th from 7 to 9pm. I really hope you can all come! :) I will remind you all again as it gets closer.

SO HAPPY, Blayne Beacham

My Gallery Dream + The Wonderland Series

I started this blog in November because I wanted to get artwork in a gallery by October 14th, 2010.  This blog opened more doors that I could have ever imagined.  It's amazing.  Last night I went to the Crave Atlanta event where Cham Home, High Gloss Blue and Running with Tweezers spoke, and the universal theme way the amazement over the power of blogs.  They are truly amazing things...  All three of them talked about how much closer they were to achieving their dreams because of their blogs.  I could not agree more. This blog has opened up doors I could never have imagined.  A few weeks ago I was at the Bobby McAlpine book signing with Charm Home and High Gloss Blue.  I saw Todd Murphy ... if you read this blog then you know about my complete obsession with Todd Murphy... Screen shot 2010-06-22 at 11.18.16 AM Screen shot 2010-06-22 at 11.18.24 AM

Todd is famous for so many things, but I fell in love with him because of these amazing dresses...

So, when I was at the event I asked Todd if he would give me some advice. Not only did he give me advice, he met me for coffee and went over my photography with me for TWO HOURS. His generosity was overwhelming. The main advice he gave me was to finish a series of which I'm really really proud.

Screen shot 2010-06-22 at 11.38.16 AM

I have been taking pictures of these dresses for so long, and I think I just hit a wall. I needed a bump in creativity.

This past weekend Matthew, Hailey Lowe and I competed in the Artist Trifecta photo scavenger hunt in Castleberry Hills.

I was so excited about the challenge because teams competed in a 13 hour challenge to solve and photograph 20 clues, edit the photographs and get them printed. The winner gets one month representation at Artist Trifecta. The 20 photographs get printed and will be hung for the next Castleberry Hill art stroll.

Here are our 20 photographs with the clues underneath them....

Wonderland black Spell out your favorite word with letters you find... We chose the word "Wonderland." This series represents our take on "Alice in Wonderland"

Loft

"A Picture of a Loft or Business Sign"

Everythign will be ok

"Everything Will Be Ok"

Alice Fallen

A Photograph with Shadows or a Sunbeam

Firetruck

"We are Number 1 at Putting Out Fires"

Flag

A Flag

Grafitti

Graffiti

Coke

"I'd like to teach the world to sing in perfect harmony."

Dogs of war

"Cry "Havoc" and release the dogs of war."

Door

A Doorway

Bull

Bull

Religion

"That'e me in the corner, that's me in the spotlight, loosing my religion."

Action

"Action"

FINAL OFFICER

Someone in uniform

Beef

"Where's the Beef"

Dancing

"I wanna be where the people are. I wanna see, wanna see um dancing."

Cinderella

"If Cinderella was 21 she would dink out of one of these."

Train Track

Railroad Tracks

City Scape

City Scape

equation2

A series of numbers that adds up to 10.

So that's it.....

The photographs are being judged now, and I will find out on the July 9th Castleberry Hills art stroll if my dream came true and I finally get work into a galley! Cross your fingers for me :)

Even if I don't win, I finally have a set of pictures that I'm so excited about...

Thank you so much to Matthew and Hailey. I couldn't have done it without you!

Remember to enter the "My Favorite Room" contest by Wednesday at midnight!!