Saturday, June 28, 2014

New Roads (and I just cannot make this stuff up)

I headed out bright & early this Saturday morning to spend a day shooting in the Virginia country-side with my shutter sister sidekick, Suzanne. We had a general plan and direction, but the day was beautiful and cool for June and we also decided to let the day unfold as we cruised the back roads.

Driving down Snickersville Turnpike we spotted an old red truck, every ready to stop for a photo op, Suzanne steered her mini into a gravel drive - realizing we'd entered someone's driveway I said this is someone's home we should probably move on - Suzanne jumped out & asked permission to shoot the truck from the woman we saw tending her chickens at the edge of the property. She said yes, and so begins an adventure.

This is the truck that lured us off the road. It's a 1951 Ford that was last used to deliver milk from Loudoun county dairy farms to Dulles Airport.


































The couple, whose home we'd invaded were Paula Catan-Rose and Squirrel Monger (yes that is is his real name, he vowed it was on his driver's license and credit card, and that we could ask anyone in the area and they'd know who he was). The property was named Iron Horse Acres, due to the large number of iron horses (vehicles) that were on the property and waiting for Squirrel's attention. The sign was made by a neighbor's son of car parts and motorcycle chains.


We also met their dog Laptop--a rescue, Paula knew he was "older than dirt" but she wasn't sure exactly how old. Laptop came by his name because he likes to sit on laps. We also met Garfield, a great mouser who had been in more than a few scraps in his life--also a rescue.









































Paula is fascinated with area history and she sent us out to find a town called North Fork--nothing of the town left now but she filled us in on the history. North Fork used to have a post office, general store, and a cobbler's shop on a corner--in addition to a few houses. Some of the houses are left but the cobbler's shop is long gone - Paula bought the 400 square foot piece of ground where the cobbler's shop once stood and planted it with tomatoes. She invites anyone in the area to stop and pick tomatoes - and to share with her any history they may know of North Fork and it's former residents. The cobbler's shop is important because it was a business owned by James Hicks. Mr. Hicks was born in 1845 and enslaved in the home of a Methodist minister until emancipation in 1865. James Hicks was a founder of the Loudoun County Emancipation Association and a business man. By 1900 he had clear title to a house, an orchard, and the cobbler's shop in North Fork. You can read more about James Hicks here: http://www.hallowedground.org/African-American-Heritage/Goose-Creek-Rural-Historic-District

This house is one of the buildings left in North Fork. It appears to be abandoned but there are also signs of construction around it so - hopefully - it is being restored.

































We actually got lost trying to find North Fork, but thanks to modern technology (thanks Siri!) we found a location for North Forks Cemetery and that was our next stop after North Fork. The cemetery was associated with the North Fork Baptist Church which was established in 1835 (or 1868 depending on sources). By 1937 there was an Old and a New School Baptist churches with the cemetery laying between them. Now there is only the one church, the other was converted to a private residence and the cemetery is also owned by the same person - he allowed us to photograph in the cemetery as long as we didn't vandalize it.





The property owner did tell me to make sure and note the "most unusual grave of all the civil war graves in the state of Virginia." It is the grave site of the Holmes brothers - Charles and John. Both brothers fought in the same civil war battle, survived but were captured and imprisoned in the Point Lookout (Maryland) civil war prison widely known as the largest and worst of all the prison camps. Both brothers died in the camp and at the end of the war their bones were put into the same casket and shipped to their mother for burial.
































There are always wonders to discover when setting out with a camera and an open mind.


If you would like to see my work on a daily basis, as well as other projects I undertake, please follow me on Facebook at tART - Photography and Art by Terry Rowe,  https://www.facebook.com/tarrowe. If you'd like to purchase a print of any of my images please contact me or visit my website, http://terry-rowe.artistwebsites.com/.  



Saturday, June 21, 2014

Laundry Day in Saissaic

Driving through the French village of Saissaic we stopped by the side of the road to take pictures and were enchanted by the these linens hanging on the line to dry.

Below is the original photograph. It has been cropped and edited to add more flowers, and to change the color of the yellow roses to pink.





































Next, I brought the photograph into Corel Painter X3 and began painting. Below is a sample of the painted work in progress. I rather like this loose stage and might re-work the painting to a more abstract, loose look.





































Finally, the finished piece - painted with five different brushes - texture added and signed.

































If you would like to see my work on a daily basis, as well as other projects I undertake, please follow me on Facebook at tART - Photography and Art by Terry Rowe,  https://www.facebook.com/tarrowe. If you'd like to purchase a print of any of my images please contact me or visit my website, http://terry-rowe.artistwebsites.com/.  

Friday, June 20, 2014

Reflections and Windows

Last week I visited the Andrew Wyeth exhibit, "Looking Out, Looking In," at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. It is an amazing collection of Wyeth's paintings of windows, images that inspire a new seeing, and a call to reflection.

This week I attended a high school graduation and listened to the usual speeches reflecting on the past four years and looking to the future, the hopefully bright future, stretching out ahead of the graduates. I felt a small flare of envy and a great surge of excitement for the graduates, all those beautiful years ahead of them, all that life to be lived. I reflected on my own high school graduation, some tens of years ago, the years stretching out before me. That future is now my past, the bright future and stretch of years behind instead of before me. The future, the years have been used, wisely or not.

Looking forward, with the past behind me, I still have a future to be lived. Using a mirror as a window to the past, keeping it's lessons in mind as I move into the future I still have before me.



Young and old, we all have a past and we all have a future. The only difference is the length of each. The only reality is our time is ours to use, and it is up to us how well we use the time that is given us.

If you would like to see my work on a daily basis, as well as other projects I undertake, please follow me on Facebook at tART - Photography and Art by Terry Rowe,  https://www.facebook.com/tarrowe. If you'd like to purchase a print of any of my images please contact me or visit my website, http://terry-rowe.artistwebsites.com/.  






Monday, June 16, 2014

A Work in Progress

Southern Maryland Barns is a digital hand painted work in progress.

This piece started with a photograph I took early this spring in southern Maryland. I was driving to a memorial service when I saw the light slanting across the fields and outlining the barns. I did a u-turn, pulled over, and got a couple of shots off. I wasn't happy with the big tree in the way and all the power lines, but I loved the light and hoped that I could do something with the photograph someday.

The original photograph





I brought the photograph into Adobe Photoshop (raw file) - removed the power lines, swapped out the sky, and bumped up the saturation. Since I knew I'd be using the base of the photograph as a painting I wasn't too concerned about being absolutely clean in my removal of objects. The edge of the tree line, where it meets the sky, is particularly sloppy. I'm still debating the sky though. I might go back and paint a second version with a "milder" sky.

The edited version
I pulled the edited photograph in to Corel Painter and began painting. I wanted the tree gone - so I painted it out and painted the rest of the 2nd barn into the scene. I've still got work to do, but I'm enjoying the process.

Southern Maryland Barns, the work in progress



If you would like to see my work on a daily basis, as well as other projects I undertake, please follow me on Facebook at tART - Photography and Art by Terry Rowe,  https://www.facebook.com/tarrowe. If you'd like to purchase a print of any of my images please contact me or visit my website, http://terry-rowe.artistwebsites.com/. 



Saturday, June 14, 2014

Farmer's Markets

Shopping at your local farmer's market is a great way to visit with neighbors, get fresh local produce, and support small independent businesses. I'm very lucky to have a small farmer's market within walking distance of my home in Virginia.


And, as a contrast, a week ago I was in Revel, France at their farmer's market. It was a much larger market, but similar in intent.











































If you would like to see my work on a daily basis, as well as other projects I undertake, please follow me on Facebook at tART - Photography and Art by Terry Rowe,  https://www.facebook.com/tarrowe. If you'd like to purchase a print of any of my images please contact me or visit my website, http://terry-rowe.artistwebsites.com/. 

Friday, June 13, 2014

Jet Lag Limbo

I love to travel, I love the different perspectives - the freshness and excitement of looking with new eyes on a world transformed.

What I don't love is the re-entry - the flurry of slipping back into the life I left behind while I was gone - a life that doesn't quite fit because I have shifted, transformed a bit. It's like a pair of favorite socks that have been washed and now are a bit scratchy and tight.

Add to the mix a dose of jet lag and a summer cold and I find myself in a hazy limbo of slight discomfort and discombobulated. So I wait, rest, and paint pictures in my head.




If you would like to see my work on a daily basis, as well as other projects I undertake, please follow me on Facebook at tART - Photography and Art by Terry Rowe,  https://www.facebook.com/tarrowe. If you'd like to purchase a print of any of my images please contact me or visit my website, http://terry-rowe.artistwebsites.com/.