“Everybody’s a photographer” – H.H. Bennett,1902

I had the pleasure to visit the H.H. Bennett Studio in Wisconsin Dells recently. H.H. Bennett was one of the pioneering landscape photographers from the 19th century who helped elevate photography into a true art form. His camera equipment and darkroom were mostly handmade but he still captured very nice images of the Wisconsin Dells. This plaque is part of the  museum exhibit of his photographs, darkroom and studio that is still on main street in Wisconsin Dells where it has been for over a century.

The excerpt shown in the above photograph is from a letter he wrote in 1902 that really hit home for me and I’m sure will with any other professional photographer these days. History truly repeats itself.

It’s ironic that a professional photographer almost 110 years ago was lamenting the pressures from the newest technology of the day -The Kodak Brownie camera. Today of course it’s the digital camera. A phrase often exchanged in emails today between professional photographers is, “Everybody’s a photographer” and that same thought was being written in letters by the professionals of the early 20th century.

In a way it’s reassuring to me to read Bennett’s letter, photography as an art form survived the Kodak Brownie, so there is hope. The Bownie was a temporary setback for H.H. Bennett but his work is still being celebrated today over 100 years after his passing. I believe there will always be people out there who recognize the difference between an amateur’s photographs and professional’s body of work who has dedicated their lifetime to perfecting their craft.

Nobody would walk up to Eric Clapton and say, “Wow, what kind of guitar is that?” but the question “What kind of camera do you shoot with?” is asked of a photographer every day. It does get frustrating. There is something about the world of photography that leads people to believe it’s just an expensive camera that magically produces wonderful photographs. Maybe the photo magazines and the camera companies want you to believe that so you will run out and spend more money on camera gear? But I could go out and buy the same guitar that Eric Clapton owns and the noise I would make with it would not be music.

I had a conversation with an insightful gentleman who came into my booth at a recent art show that really raised my spirits after a long day of slow sales. He recited a great quote in reference to this obsession people have with cameras. “Two painters can converse for hours about art and never mention what kind of brushes they use.” He is certainly someone who understands that photography is not about the camera. He obviously is one of the people who sees the difference between an amateur’s photographs and a professional’s. So there is hope!

To learn more about the H.H. Bennett Studio  be sure to visit their web site or the Wikipedia page on Bennett

Reinvention…

A good friend of ours started a blog on “reinvention” and used me as one of her first subjects. She did a great job of capturing the trials and tribulations involved in my first few years attempting to become a nature photographer. It’s been fun but hasn’t been all peaches and cream either. I’ll let Rebecca’s words tell the rest of the story, Here’s her blog post… (the above photo is taken by Rebecca Schlei)

It’s been bird week in the Everglades!

I’ve spent some time between shows camping at Collier Seminole State Park and found some great shots nearby in the Fakahatchee. It’s going to be hard to edit these down to just one or two to prints for art shows. Here are some from the first look through. I always try to avoid looking at the photos while I’m in the field, but I was pretty excited to see these. So there I was up late with my laptop editing on a picnic table in my campsite. I probably had the other campers wondering about this weird guy camping by himself looking at his laptop.

These snowy egrets are hunting by flying low over the water dragging their feet in the water to scare up some bait fish in front of them and scooping them out of the water in flight. They just kept putting on the show for me giving me lots of chances for photos. All in nice light. Thank you snowy egrets!

Some more from the 10,000 Islands Marsh Trail along the Tamiami Trail I shot this morning. This tri-colored heron put on a nice show for me while hunting for fish in the morning light.

This great blue heron picked a nice spot to pose for me in the Sweetwater Strand on Loop Road.

Rock Bakken

I swung in to see Rock Bakken while I was home in Hallock, MN this Christmas and got see this painting of an ibis inspired by one of my photos from Corkscrew Swamp Sactuary in Florida. I guess you could call Rock Hallock’s most well known artist, I’ve always loved his wildlife drawings and paintings so it was really cool to have him paint something from one of my photos! Nazan and I call our spare bedroom the “Rock Room” because it’s decorated with prints of Rock’s drawings. Now I we just need a painting!

Some Recent Local Photos…

I’ve been spending some time this fall exploring closer to home, something we often neglect to do. There are dozens of conservation parks in Madison that offer a walk in the woods right in the middle of Wisconsin’s second largest city. I walk through the 96-acre Owen Conservation Park almost every day on my way to have coffee and read the paper. A great morning ritual. It’s about a 1/4 mile from our house and we often see wild turkeys in the neighborhood and at night sometimes we hear coyotes howling. And we live about 5 miles from the state capital!

Here are a few photos that are contenders for me to print up for art shows…

I’ve been experimented with doing fall colors in black and white and actually like the black and whites better than the color photos. The yellow leaves on the maple leaves in the U.W. Arboretum made for some interesting shots. This stand of Maples is about a 1/4 mile from the West Beltline highway, a very peaceful place despite it’s close proximity to 6 lanes of traffic.

A very interesting looking plant growing in a meadow in the Arboretum.

One from Owen Conservancy, a short walk from our house.

This is from the same stand of Maples as the first photo, I love how the bright yellows come across in black and white. It almost looks like an infrared shot. They must have done a controlled burn here recently considering all these maple saplings growing at about the exact same height.

Theodore Roosevelt National Park- The North Dakota Badlands


It was a bit chilly, even for North Dakota this last week, but I enjoyed 5 days of shooting in Theodore Roosevelt National Park in Western North Dakota. I arrived and set up my tent in a small snowstorm, but the weather slowly improved.

It’s one of my favorite national parks because nobody has every heard of it, therefore it’s never the least bit crowded. In fact, walk just a bit off the road and you are almost guaranteed complete solitude. T.R. National Park has very similar topography and wildlife to the more well known Badlands National Park in South Dakota so it’s a photographer’s paradise. Lots of textures and stark light.

I came back to this spot several times trying to get perfect light and clouds, I loved this formation, it looked like a movie set for an alien world in a Star Trek episode.

I can’t say I really got anything wonderful the morning after it snowed, It was my first morning out shooting and the snow only lasted a short time before the day warmed up a bit.

This is a petrified tree stump laying on it’s side along the Petrified Forest Trail on the West side of the park. I really loved this area, it was fascinating to imagine what this place looked like millions of years ago among these fossilized tree stumps. My only company was 3 buffalo that kept a close eye on me as I wondered around the hundreds of fossilized tree stumps littering the now arid Badlands.

The petrified forest is well worth the short hike from a gate on the west side of the park. Getting to the trailhead you drive outside of the park through cattle pastures dotted with oil wells. After spending days driving in the park alongside bison and the other wildlife, the drive outside the park is a reminder of what Theodore Roosevelt National Park would look like if the park was not set aside. It’s sad to think that the entire middle of our country had bison roaming just 150 years ago and such a small portion of our natural history was preserved. But thankfully to people like President Theodore Roosevelt, some of it was.

Bison can be very unpredictable and ornery and although I’ve never seen one doing anything aggressive, I don’t want to put that to the test. Maybe I’m being too honest here, but I have to admit I shot this from the window of my pickup. I know it sounds lame to sit in your car and take wildlife photos but I actually did it more and more as the week went on. The bison are used to cars passing by, slowing down and stopping, but as soon as you get out of the car they get more skittish about you being there. So by staying in the car it creates less stress on the animals, actually allows for good photos and keeps me from becoming tomorrow’s tragic headline. This bison was grazing near the road and I just sat and waited, and sure enough he came 20 feet from the car.

I did a lot of photos like this one, trying to find the perfect textures and formation to photograph an abstract detail like this of the eroding landscape. The funniest thing was every time a person passed by in a car they would stop and stare, wondering what I was photographing. I think they suspected I must see a bison or antelope they don’t. After a minute looking puzzled they would drive on.