Tag: landscape

  • The Exhibition is up at Hudson Hospital and Clinic

    A selection of my landscape photographs were chosen as part of the Healing Arts Program curated by the Phipps Gallery in Hudson, WI. I’m exhibiting at the Hudson Hospital and Clinic starting this week and until the end of May, then again starting in July at Westfields Hospital & Clinic in New Richmond, WI. There are nineteen works including color prints on metal, black and white silver gelatin prints and some Giclée.

    color landscape photographs
    Landscape photographs at the Hudson Hospital and Clinic.
    black and white landscape photographs
    Landscape photographs at the Hudson Hospital and Clinic.
    Large metal color landscape prints
    Landscape photographs at the Hudson Hospital and Clinic.
  • Dramatic Landscape Photographs – Cloudscapes 2016-2017

    Spring is heating up into Summer. Here are some dramatic cloud formations captured between 2016 and 2017. These cloudscape photographs will be printed as archival inkjet prints and are available in several sizes.

    Three Pillars, 2016
    Three Pillars, 2016 – Available in 6×9, 8×12, & 18×24
    Anvil & Storm, 2016
    Anvil and Storm, 2016 – Available in 6×9, 8×12, & 18×24
    Landscape in Infrared, 2017
    Landscape in Infrared, 2017 – Available in 8×10, 11×14, & 16×20
    The Anvil, 2017
    The Anvil, 2017 – Available in 6×9, 8×12, & 18×24
  • St. Louis Park Friends of the Arts Exhibit!

    Last week, I had the good fortune to exhibit two pieces in the SLP FOTA exhibit. I grew up in SLP so it was nice to have something in the show. Two other photographers in our Midwest Passage photography group had work in the show as well. My images were from the series that I have been doing on the flooded golf course just a few blocks from my house. The flood created a wetland bayou, disrupting a carefully manicured and managed area. The future is still uncertain for this area because the flood devastated the course.

    Blowdown was taken with an 8×10 film camera. I couldn’t get over the way nature had claimed this path between the fairway and the green. Shortly after I made this image, the groundskeepers started repairing the path and this composition was wiped away. Like so many good subjects, this was only available to see for a short time and now it will never be seen again other than in photographs. Lugging 30 pounds of gear to this spot and lingering in the stench of the bog was worth it.

    Meadowbrook Bayou was photographed with a medium format film camera early in the course of the flood. I marveled at how nature took this land back, if even for a short time.

    Blowdown

    Meadowbrook Bayou