Featuring Creatives - Interview No. 1

Digging

Digging

Tornado

Tornado

Bunny Peeks In

Bunny Peeks In

Birds Can't Fly 

Birds Can't Fly 

First Peek In The Bag

First Peek In The Bag

http://www.framednetwork.com Bonus content here : http://bit.ly/1d4pLSt Out of Houston, Texas, Bonnie and Gabe enjoy communicating and collaborate through photography, videography, creative & inspirational writing, creative printing and collaboration. They love learning, shooting, being inspired, teaching, experimenting, and helping others find inspiration. www.TwoCreativeBirds.com http://www.framednetwork.com

Welcome To Happy

Welcome To Happy

First, tell me as much as you can about yourself in a haiku.

Attention span of
A moth who can’t decide where
To direct my time

How did you get your start with what you do?

Bonnie- I come from a long line of dark room dwellers. My dad, my grandfather, my…okay, it’s a relatively short line of darkroom dwellers. So I spent most of my high school days darkroom dancing and smelling like foul chemicals. The problem was my attention span really kept me from keeping my prints in the chemicals long enough so the proof of my greatness has all turned brown and corroded.

I held on to film swearing I’d never leave it behind. But the moment I touched a digital camera my darkroom equipment went to the attic and it’s only been recently that I’ve started missing it a little. What I lacked in attention span for chemicals settling, I make up for in the focus I can put into an image in Photoshop. I think Netflix in the background was the real ticket.

How have you seen yourself grow as an artist?

Bonnie- I’ve become obsessed with getting my images to look exactly the way I want them to. I’ve never had an ounce of OCD in my blood but I’ve always wished I did so I could keep myself from throwing my dirty clothes on the floor. But something OCD-ish comes out in me when I’m working on an image I care about and I can spend three days tweaking a blade of grass until it looks exactly the way I want it to. With film, I thought everything was good enough and it kept me from ever creating anything decent. (Except for the time in ’96 when I got to be Willie Nelson’s photographer at a festival. Even crappily developed, those were awesome shots.) (They’re brown now.) So I think having the patience to get the results I want is how I’ve grown the most.

What's one art-related memory that sticks out in your mind?

Bonnie- I love and hate this question. I love it because there are so many incredible art related memories that come to my mind and now you’ll never know it but it’ll likely take me an hour to answer it after I think about them all. I hate it because I have no idea how to pick just one that sticks out. But I think I’ll go with the time that all of the finest artists the world has ever known came to spend time in Houston for an exhibition we were all apart of. It was like artist camp at my house with some of the greatest collaborating minds staying up all night talking Photoshop. (No literally, I’ve been answering this question for over an hour while I stop to think about the stories I’m not telling.) While they were here we were filming a pilot episode for a show my husband and I want to start called Creator’s Blok. Everyone had a theme they had to work with and we filmed everyone creating their images as we all worked together. One day, when our lives aren’t weighted down in the quicksand of everything that has major deadlines, we will finally be able to put it all together as the first episode.

What are a few things on your "Bucket List?"

  • Creator’s Blok is a big one.
  • Going to Australia to camp out on Gee Greenslade’s front door until she opens it and teaches me how to edit like she does is up at the top.
  • Moving to Ashland, Oregon and convincing our families to join us.
  • Opening a storage unit that is half storage space/half artist studios
  • But the most important one on my list is to finish the 20 image series I’ve been working on, Bunny Danger Awesome Slash Trouble. Finishing it will happen. But the bucket list aspect is having people fall in love with it and having some amazing movie company (hopefully Moonbot Studios) realize it is the story they’ve been dreaming of making a movie about their whole lives. I’m pretty sure this will happen too.

What have you been currently up to?

Bonnie- I’m constantly working on my Bunny Danger Awesome Slash Trouble project. But we’re also furiously working on getting our house up for sale, running our photography studio and trying to figure out how we’re going to start over in Oregon. We’re hoping to be there by January to start living in paradise where we won’t spend 2 hours a day stuck in traffic.

What fuels your artistic soul?

Bonnie- Collaboration. Hands down. There’s nothing I love more than working with other people to create something incredible and being able to sit back and reflect on the memories together. I love shoots where we’ve had to reach out the people we know, whether it was for a Delorian or 200 donkeys, we always end up having meaningful adventures.

I’m fortunate too that my husband is my business partner. We get to collaborate with each other on every shoot we do. I think having each other has shown us photography doesn’t have to be such a lonely journey and it’s made our ultimate goal to be helping other photographers collaborate with each other.

Who are three artists you're either inspired by or look up to?

Bonnie- Three? Good grief. As if I can narrow it down to three. To spread the love for where my inspiration comes from fairly, I’ll give you my favorite graffiti artist, favorite painter and then one photographer. I can’t call her my favorite photographer because I have a list entirely too long of favorite photographers. But she’s at the tippity top.

Graffiti Artist: Deuce Seven -I think he’s the first artist I ever truly started following and feeling connected to his work.

Painter: Kevin Peterson - He’s probably the greatest painter I’ve ever seen in my life. He also happens to be a great person and a friend of mine. But he’s the first artist I’ve ever known who spent all of his time putting his passion into his painting and truly earning a living from what he created. His work speaks for itself.

Photographer: Maggie Taylor - I probably love her because she doesn’t even consider herself a photographer. The woman tells wild stories with her images and it fuels my soul. We keep her book next to the bedside table so my son and I can look at her pictures and make up stories based on what we see.

What would a 'perfect' day for you be like?

Bonnie- A perfect day would be spent with my husband Gabe and my son Jones creating art together….and preferably having someone on the other end wanting to pay us for it. (I used to think my art isn’t about the money, but I’ve recently discovered that when we have to spend all of our time trying to figure out where the money is going to come from we don’t have enough time to create art. The vicious cycle.) We work together on projects all the time. My four year old is constantly spotting locations he wants to shoot in and giving me Photoshop tips. So, for the most part, almost every day is perfect for me.

Is there anything else that you'd like to add?

Bonnie- Forgive me if my answers are just entirely too romantic. We’re watching The Princess Bride while I answer them, so you can imagine how much love, passion and desire to kill giant rats might be on my mind.

Speaking of Love. I think you and your art are the Jam, Kory Zuccarelli. Thank you so much for the honor of being interviewed by you! (In Princess Bride fashion, please read that statement in a British accent with an orchestra playing behind you.)

 

The Great Blog Hop of 2014

The Great Blog Hop of 2014

What am I working on now? 

Behind the Scenes photo credit: Tom Newfordge

Ah, so many many interesting things! Right after graduating in June, I immediately joined in (completely spur of the moment) on a road trip through Cleveland, Gary, Chicago, and Detroit. I photographed and explored so many abandoned homes, schools, and beautifully decayed churches. I still have so much to edit! Blog post about the eventually. Soon after coming home, I flew out to Las Vegas, to attend an amazing creative workshop ran by Jenna and Josh. Then a week later, I spent a week camping as a volunteer photographer for Camp Quality New Jersey (Read about CQNJ here). The next day, I meet up with two of my Fromagi friends and had a little photo adventure where I shot this self portrait on a waterfall. 

My good friend Bonnie of Bonnie and Gabe Two Creative Birds featured in this amazing pass-it-forward blog for photographers that inspire us last week. When I first heard of the concept, I instantly thought it was brilliant and such a great way for photographers to promote other creative photographers working in the same field. Put enough creative minds into something and amazing things really do happen.

Since Bonnie was featured in one blog of the "Great Blog Hop," she featured my two talented friends Jenna and Josh, and myself in hers. This week it's my turn! Before getting these three photographic wonders, here's the part of the Blog Hop where I do a little Q&A about my myself and my work. 

Why do I do what I do?

Oh man, so many reasons. Photography came to me during a rough time in my life and I used it as an outlet to focus my mind on things, and it quickly became my passion really. Before the photo world entered my life, back in middle and high school, I read a lot of books and spent a good amount of time on creative writing. I liked the fact that I had total control of a little universe that I could play out in words. When I began using my photography to start telling these stories in my head, it felt right and I haven't looked back. 

How does my work differ from others of its genre?

I mean to start off, we're all unique and each one of us bring something to the artist dinner table. It's easy to compare my work to others in the same genre… but that's pretty much the definition of the word. Each of our ideas, styles, and photographic intentions originate from different places, and that's how I think it's such an interesting genre flux in our medium that is so vasty different and similar all at once.  

How does my creative process work? 

Literally with my "Brain." That's what I call my photo notebook filled with ideas, concepts I want to shoot, doodles, locations, model info, inspiring quotes. Everything. A few months ago I had to condense and organize a bulk of this material to a new and fresh notebook, dedicating ideas to individual pages. Inspiration to me comes from so many places. Sometimes I'm inspired to create something personal through an experience I've had, other times it comes from a movie, song, a quote, or some short story that I thought of. There are those days where I hit a brick wall. It happens, it's inevitable. You regroup and move on. What I love about my brain is that I can go over and review this during those times.  

Lets start off with Kavan. On YouTube, I came across an artist highlight video on the Framed Network and they featured Kavan. I immediately jumped onto his Flickr page and dove straight into his work. When I first discovered his work, Kavan was still in the early stages of a 365 project (Posting one new photo everyday for an entire year). He began shooting this project to hone his photographic skills and train his mind to transition the concepts he has in his head into his art. Watching as the days go by, seeing his posts daily inspire me, and push me on those days where I'm not as concentrated to go out and shoot something new when there is nothing holding me back.

I've had thoughts before on starting my own 365 project, but that actually scares me in some ways. In the back of my head I keep screaming, "Don't do it!" I know that's silly though. 

Watching Kavan's transition from where his project took off to where it is today gives me hope that maybe one day I'll start that type of commitment.

One of the things I really enjoy about Kavan's work is that he likes to bring something new into his work pretty frequently. Whether with the style of lighting he using changes, the scale of simplicity to complexity of his concepts, and the diverse characters he plunges into that create his photo worlds into realities is absolutely amazing. Today is day 265 of his 365 project. 100 days to go! I wish Kavan luck on his growth and continued determination with the completion of his 365 project. It's amazing to see the significant improvements one can make by focusing on the same thing day in and out. 

Diggie is a talented fine art photographer that I came across of through a friend of mine. At the time I discovered his work, he was nearing the end of his own 365 project. It was simply amazing to see the growth he had within that year. Every time that I've seen a photographer apply themselves to one of these projects, the positive influence it has on their lives and the amount of strengths they find within their skill set grows abundantly, and Diggie is a prime example. 

When I look at his work, I'm find my self discovering interesting relationships within his concepts. His use of symbolism is stunning.  

His use of light, subtle yet powerful postures, and surreal qualities in his photography are the elements in his work that inspire me.

What I enjoy about Diggie, along with Kavan, is that they are using self portraiture in a lot of their work. They are able to remove themselves from our world for a moment and take on the persona of the characters they portray in their images. More recently I've been putting myself into my photography. The work of both of these artists inspire me to continue that... possibly working up to my own 365 someday. 

 

I literally stumbled upon Holly's work yesterday while getting ready to write his blog post and I had to include her because, at that moment she inspired me. That's what this whole Blog Hop is, in a nutshell really.

While scrolling down my newsfeed, her photograph (center photo) appeared. She had just shared it to a photography Facebook group we both belong to and I immediately though it was beautiful. The pop of red, the painterly tones, the expressions on their faces, and the form their bodies made with the flowing fabric; it completely blew me away!

Holly's skills are amazing. Her understanding of color, light, and expression, inspire me to go out and shoot something new as soon as I can. I see her imagination growing with her most recent work. There is an amazing future in store for Holly, I can see it.

I look forward to seeing her new work in my newsfeed now.