Q: How has photography changed your approach to painting?
A: From the beginning in the 1980s I used photographs as reference material and my late husband, Bryan, would shoot 4” x 5” negatives of my elaborate setups using his Toyo-Omega view camera. In those days I rarely picked up a camera except when we were traveling.
After Bryan was killed on 9/11, I inherited his extensive camera collection – old Nikons, Leicas, Graphlex cameras, etc. – and I wanted to learn how to use them. Starting in 2002 I enrolled in a series of photography courses (about 10 over 4 years) at the International Center of Photography in New York. I learned how to use all of Bryan’s cameras and how to make my own big color prints in the darkroom.
Along the way I discovered that the sense of composition and color I had developed over many years as a painter translated well into photography. The camera was just another medium with which to express my ideas. Astonishingly, in 2009 I had my first solo photography exhibition in New York.
It’s wonderful to be both a painter and a photographer. Pastel painting will always be my first love, but photography lets me explore ideas much faster than I ever could as a painter. Paintings take months of work. Photographs – from the initial impulse to create a setup to hanging a framed chromogenic print on the wall – can be made in minutes.
Comments are welcome!
Posted on August 3, 2024, in 2024, An Artist's Life, Inspiration, New York, NY, Painting in General, Pastel Painting, Photography and tagged 9/11, another, astonishingly, beginning, Bryan, camera, chromogenic, collection, color, composition, courses, create, darkroom, developed, discovered, elaborate, enrolled, exhibition, explore, express, extensive, faster, first love, framed, Graphlex, hanging, husband, impulse, inherited, initial, International Center of Photography, killed, learned, Leica, material, medium, minutes, negatives, New York, Nikon, painter, paintings, pastel painting, photographer, photographs, photography, picked up, prints, rarely, reference, series, setup, starting, Toyo-Omega, translated, traveling, Untitled, view camera, wanted, wonderful. Bookmark the permalink. 4 Comments.

Barbara, I am so proud of you and the fact that you worked so hard in the new medium of photography when I know you were still grieving. It is exciting to have a friend who is such a wonderful, and hard working I know, artist.
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Karolyn, thank you very much for your kind thoughts. I am so glad that we met and became friends!
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Congratulations on the exciting photos from Bali.
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Karolyn, thank you.
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