Monthly Archives: September 2014

Photographic Frontiers Study Group meeting this Wednesday, October 1

The Photographic Frontiers Study Group (PFSG) will meet once again this Wednesday, October 1, 2014, at Mike’s Camera (third floor, use the back entrance and elevator), from 7-9pm. No dues, membership, or fees required. At this meeting, Gail Dohrmann will give a presentation on iPhonography that promises to provide a fascinating insight into one of the ways that she creates her beautiful art.

Gail states that, among other things, “I will provide a handout that I created of the top 30 apps and the functions they cover. I was driven to create this because no such handy reference exists that I know of. Members can bring an iPhone Image to show (on a thumb drive) and I will give suggestions as to how it may be modified and improved by using various iPhone apps that are available in the app store.”

Folks, if you’re not coming to the PFSG, you are missing out on something both educational and a hell of a lot of fun. And if you’re at all familiar with Gail’s art, you know you shouldn’t miss this one.

October 9, 2014- Steve O’Bryan: From Within: Photography As Self-Portraiture

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For the last twenty-plus years or so, I’ve taught ancient Greek and Roman history at a university in Denver. From that long perspective, there’s not much new under the sun. But I also take photographs—-and I’m as passionate about those as I am the ancient Romans. My company, Wild Basin Photography and Gallery, is located in the North Boulder Art District. My portfolio is filled with images of Boulder, Colorado, and the Rocky Mountain West. But it also includes images from Rome, Florence and Northern New Mexico (Santa Fe, Abiquiu, and Ghost Ranch—-Georgia O’Keefe’s landscape).
For me, the best thing about photography is being out taking photographs. You are immediately surrounded by a pulsing, 360-degree-multi-sensory environment. The art of photography is reducing this mind’s- eye sensory experience into an aesthetically pleasing, two-dimensional image by blending technology with deliberate, intentional, and personal artistic seeing.
So on many levels, the process of making photographs is more complicated than it appears. The beauty and/or interest of a scene pulls the photographer in; but memorable photographs come from within the photographer—quite literally from the inside out as a kind of self-portraiture. This transcends the personal style a photographer may have and becomes the first level of “meaning” a photograph may have.
In this presentation, we will look at a series of images and raise some of the many issues related to this artistic and personal side of the photographic process.
Lastly, the next best thing to taking photographs is to talk about them. This should be an interesting evening and I invite you to join the discussion!
Wild Basin Twilight wo wmFrom Within-1

Club meeting September 11, 2014

The Flatirons Photo Club will have its monthly meeting at 7 p.m. tonight, Sept. 11, in the south building at Har HaShem, 3901 Pinon Drive. Turn right off Baseline
into Har HaShem, continue through the parking lot to the south building on the right.
Tonight we will have our annual exhibition of members’ work. Guests and visitors are always welcome.