My maternal grandmother’s sister gave this cactus to her in the mid 1930s. My grandmother gave this cactus to me in 1981. It has moved with us from Michigan to Atlanta to New York back to Georgia and now to Florida. I have pruned and propagated it many times to share its beauty. I used to call it my Christmas cactus, but now I have a different species that blooms at Christmas and this one blooms later, so I have renamed it my New Year’s cactus. This is the first bloom of the season. Rather than a side view, I decided to make the photos lying on my back looking up towards the sun to see inside and through the petals. I played with the backgrounds to give it a variety of moods.
On September 20, 2015 I paid my respects at 9/11 ground zero for the second time. The first time was in November of 2001. So much had changed. Instead of rubble surrounded by fencing and personal memorials, there was a museum and waterfalls into pools on the footprint of the twin towers with names inscribed of those who died in the buildings and the first responders. There was a sculpture that looked like bird wings and a new tower. Many visitors quietly walked the site, paying respects, grieving.
I created these montages as my memorial. Can you see the ghosts? I call it Freedom Rising. Many years earlier I worked for American Express and went through or by the World Trade Towers on my way to work at the Financial Center. During the first underground attack of the World Trade Center I was working for Genlyte in Secaucus, New Jersey and could see the plumes of smoke from my office window.
I have great difficulty in understanding the hatred that motivates humans to hurt and kill one another, again and again and again. But I know that we must not be defeated by hatred. This is why I call my memorial Freedom Rising. We do not forget, but we use it as a way to contrast our love, optimism, and courage to build again, to soar like the phoenix from the ashes, and thank those who give of themselves to protect our freedom.
As a volunteer photographer for the botany department of Marie Selby Botanical Gardens, I have the privilege of being able to pose the plants in front of a black drape, light them and make a series of photos. Some of these are single images. Some are “focus stacked,” with multiple images made and then stacked by focal area in Photoshop. If the flower moves at all during the multiple shots, strange abstracts emerge. I enjoy them, but it is details that the botanists need. I keyword them and then they are added to a worldwide data base for botanists, who compare and contrast by family, genus and species. I have included one of the “ruler shots” to show the size of bloom.
My photo,Circle of Life, won first place in the Marie Selby Botanical Gardens 41st annual photo exhibition. You can see all the photos in the link below.
https://selbygardensvirtualphotoexhibition.artcall.org/pages/web-gallery
A great blue heron visits the ponds behind our house. I made this series of photos during golden hour. The colors of the feathers are really beautiful. The backgrounds were not all beautiful, so I tried to make them so with painting and other photos.
Marie Selby Botanical Gardens is featuring a pop artist’s take on Monet’s paintings. Roy Lichtenstein created large collages of Monet inspired themes, the haystacks and the waterlilies. As a pop artist, Lichtenstein used contemporary devises, like the dots used to turn drawings into print. He oversized the dots so they became a signature part of his work/play. The blue/green is the iconic Monet color of his house and garden hardscape.
Monarchs, green flies, Tillandsias in bloom: I never know what I am going to find in the garden.
We visited the beautiful capital of Estonia, Tallinn, in 2018 with buildings dating back to the 13th century. Although we visited in mid-day, I chose this image to imagine what it might look like in the evening.