Tag Archives: photography

On Blitz Capitol Hill Arts Walk, Catch “Flourishing Remnants”

From "Flourishing Remnants," by Matthew Olds and Heather Joy

It’s the second anniversary of the Blitz Capitol Hill Arts Walk tonight, Thursday. Held from 5 to 8 p.m. (or later), the walk has some 40 participant venues. Whatever you do, make time to stop by Vermillion for their newest installation, “Flourishing Remnants.”

The most striking thing about “Flourishing Remnants” (at Vermillion through July 2) is its cohesion–from the large paintings of Matthew Olds to the delicate and deceptive photographs of Heather Joy and the perspective line drawing on one wall–the is a quiet and palpable weight to the installation. It has a roof. A skeletal, decaying one, but a roof nonetheless.

With excellent use of the Vermillion gallery, slender tree trunks are installed in a loose grove. In Olds’ large paintings, splintered latticework forms float and advance, supported by trees that seem to be in a struggle to simultaneously disappear and proliferate. In contrast, Joy’s photographs of greenhouse roofs at first appear sharply modernist, but reward a long gaze with their somewhat Victorian detail of glass and joints stained with rust and mildew.

What is tangible is the sense of both an extended conversation and a place behind these works. The conversation is apparent, as Olds and Joy have worked as a husband-and-wife team for ten years, and place reveals itself to be the Beall Greenhouses on Vashon Island, in use since the turn of the last century and now abandoned.

At one point housing 25 acres of roses and orchids and supplying the world, they are now clearly fragile, fragmented forms participating the quiet riot of Northwest greenery that overtakes everything that stays still too long.

Olds and Joy have done a nuanced and lovely job of capturing the fascination and contradictions inherent in watching structures dissolve and nature run her course, and their installation is one of the best I have seen at Vermillion.

Who Wants to Photograph Soundgarden?

Glimpses: Classics

For this Monday’s dip into the photographic waters of The SunBreak’s Flickr pool, there’s no particular unifying theme. Instead, I’ve highlighted a few photos from the earliest days of our collaborative photo album. Enjoy a look at what our most beloved photographic contributors were seeing in the far ago year of 2009 and, after you’ve visually visited this bygone era, please consider joining the fun.

We’re always looking for new friends to join — send a few pictures our way and you could become the star of a future edition.

(featured image by photopool MVP Tony “Great Beyond” Case)

Glimpses: Seattle Weekends

On this dreary Monday morning, we take a few moments to dwell on the stunning weekend that we just experienced. In this edition of Glimpses slideshow, take a look at how the photographers of The SunBreak’s Flickr pool have captured the last few sunny days and have memorialized classic sunny weekends of the past. We’d love to see how you spent the weekend: join our reader-powered citywide photo album and share your best shots!

(featured image by Jon Madison)

Glimpses of Spring (Slideshow)

One of the best things about the The SunBreak are the photographic contributions we find in our Flickr pool. Now that we have a new look and layout, we’re taking our Glimpses posts to a weekly format, and will build them around themes. One week we might highlight a particular photographer, the next, the search results for “yellow.” Feel free to suggest ideas. We’re going to kick things off with these glimpses of “spring.”

Lou Manna’s Tips for Mouthwatering Holiday Meal Photos

(You’re taking pictures of the bird again, right? So here’s Lou’s Tips again, republished from last year this time.)

A little while ago, the fine photographic folks at Olympus put us in touch with Lou Manna, “Olympus Digital Visionary Photographer,” for a story on photographing holiday meals.

If you’re a foodie, it’s likely you’ve already run into Lou Manna’s food photography; he shot for the New York Times for 20 years.

Now he’s got his own Fifth Avenue food photography studio, which is where he works with corporate, advertising, and restaurant clients, using (it must be noted) Olympus E-System cameras and flashes. Check out his website www.loumanna.com and blog www.digitalfoodphotography.com.

Since a picture is worth a thousand words, we talked Lou in to a photo essay. Click through each photo for a tip on how it’s done. We can vouch for the “good enough to eat” part.


Here’s Lou to get things started:

You’ve spent two days baking all of your holiday goodies… Finally on Thanksgiving Day, the turkey is ready to be gobbled up. Now you want your sweet labor to translate well in photographs. If you follow some of the following tips, then the pictures of your feast will look good enough to eat!