2/27/2012

Lifestyle!

Announcing a new addition to my site:  Lifestyle!  Check it out:  more portraits plus food and still life. I have to give credit where credit is due and I could not have done this without Melissa McGill (see my recent portrait of her below) who is, as well as being an amazing artist, an awesome art director and photo editor.  She is able to, with an insane amount of grace, put photos together in a way that makes sense and elevates the body of work to new levels.  Thank you, Melissa!




  melissa mcgill


2/06/2012

craft gone too far


I did not pull this out a box of 1970's memorabilia.  It's from the latest JoAnn Fabrics insert.

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2/02/2012

nice ice

The ice (when weather permits) has been pretty wonderful this year.  The Hudson River is still tidal here and the ice really shows off how the river flows up and down.  It creates a feast for your eyes and ears:  strange, almost lunar landscapes are formed and its cracking is unexpected and eery as the tide tugs from underneath the thin layers of ice. 








1/23/2012

the pitch drop experiment



The last time I saw my brother, he introduced me to the term "delighter"; the most simple definition of which is 'something that gives or causes delight'. My brother described it a little bit differently as in when you are watching a movie and the movie is good and you are ready to love it and then something happens in the movie that confirms your hopes of loving it and allows you to freely give that love. Like in The Italian Job with Michael Caine: you're ready to love it because it was made in 1969 and it's a heist movie but then you realize that the getaway plan consists of 3 minis, red, white and blue and your like "yeah, worth the price of admission!!".

I recently read about the Pitch Drop Experiment. It is the world's longest running lab experiment, started in 1927 when Thomas Parnell poured hot pitch into a funnel and let it cool to show how viscous a fluid could be. In the article, Nick Paumgarten mentions that no one has ever seen a drop fall (it took eight years before for the first drop fell) and that this unpredictability is one of nature's greatest offerings. Nature is, of course, the most awesome of delighters. We know that, every year, spring follows winter and yet we always thrill at the first sign of a bud on a tree. Intrigued by the pitch drop experiment, I did my own abbreviated version with honey (I wanted to make sure I was present when the first drop fell and I didn't feel like I had eight years to wait). Watching the honey drip was mesmerizing and, well, delightful. I felt myself willing each drip to drop and then spring back up in order to do it all over again. It was so beautiful. It was also an easy way to get my fix of the moment before expectation becomes a certainty.