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Caroline Mueller’s Magical Tool

Caroline Mueller

Caroline Mueller

Our next guest is an award-winning portrait photographer from Texas – Caroline Mueller.


Caroline is a Digital Portrait Photographer – dealing with images in both color and black and white. Although she can shoot film on request (color or black & white), she prefers shooting portraits with the latest technology and high-resolution digital images.


PG: Caroline, tell us about your education.

Caroline:  My love for photography began as a child. From my youth, I was taught by my grandfather, a skilled amateur photographer who was interested in photography as art and a hobby, and he enjoyed the time spent working in his darkroom. As he taught me along the way, he stressed the importance of lighting and early emphasized to me the grammar of perspective, form, shape, line, and structure. I was fascinated with the camera’s ability to capture a moment that would last for a lifetime.


Later I received my Bachelor of Fine Arts in Studio Art with a Concentration in Photography from The Meadows School of the Arts at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas. It was there at SMU that I studied with photographers Charles DeBus, Debra Hunter, and others.


PG: And what are your achievements in photograohy so far?

Caroline:

  • Designed and Produced Group Portfolio, The Portrait: In Memory of All Those We Shot.
  • Sphere of Continuity (Grand Prize Winner), On Permanent Display at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas.
  • Wrote and published book: A Collection of Statements, Comments, Images.
  • Photographer, Independent Film: T’d Off

Portrait by Caroline Mueller

Portrait

PG: What is your equipment?

Caroline: I prefer to shoot with a Nikon 7D00. My studio is located in Dallas, Texas, but we will bring photographic equipment and shoot on location for Corporate Executive Portraits, Bridal & Wedding Photography, Modeling & Fashion Shoots, Actor & Actress Headshot Sessions and Band Promo Shots.

Band by Caroline Mueller

Band

PG: Have you done any traveling?

Caroline:

  • Visionary Group: Dakar, Senegal, Africa
  • Amazon Jungle, Puerto Alegria, Peru
  • New Zealand
  • Mexico
Bridal

Bridal

PG: Photographers who inspired you?

Caroline: I was influenced by photographers Michael Kenna, Steve McCurry, Annie Leibowitz, Dorothea Lange, Ansel Adams (a friend and mentor of my professor, Charles DeBus), Albert Renger-Patzsch, and also by my late father, Herbert Clem Mueller, M.D.


PG: What is photography to you and why do you enjoy it?

Caroline: My portraits have a photojournalistic feel. My passion is getting to know people and their stories with my camera: the icebreaker and magical tool. I truly care about my clients and appreciate the value that they add to my own life. The gift that I strive to give back to my clients is a photograph that captures their essence. Using Photography as a means to capture the world around us has always been natural to me. I bring together my passions for people and photography, focusing on portraits.

Landscape

Landscape

The camera does not lie. My love for photojournalism is evident – and for telling the stories that I see – of either the amazing beauty in nature, of families, of children, of the drifter, of the lonely . . . or in giving us a glimpse of the pain and suffering that comes though poverty, oppression, disaster, or loss. I develop a keen eye for capturing images in the natural setting.


My website is dedicated in memory of my father, Dr. Herbert Clem Mueller, who was taken into the presence of the Lord on Sunday, May 25, 2008, after a courageous battle with pancreatic cancer. To read more of Dr. Mueller’s life, faith, and courageous battle with cancer and his legacy, please see the website his family created: www.PrayerAvailsMuch.com


PG: Thank you very much for your interview, Caroline, and good luck!


You can see more works by Caroline Mueller here: www.CarolineMuellerPhotography.com

Andrew 8 November 2009 Caroline Mueller Portrait, Wedding

Scott Edwards puts a personal signature on everything he shoots

Scott Edwards

Scott Edwards

Please welcome our first guest Scott Edwards, a 53-years old art photographer from Wisconsin, USA.


PG: Scott, thank you for taking the time to share your works and vision. Please tell us about your background and current occupation.

Scott: My education is in fine art printmaking. In the mid 1970s I attended the University of Wisconsin on an art scholarship and dropped out when the money dried up.


9 years ago I took up black and white photography when I discovered Edward Weston’s work and how it moved me.


I make my living exhibiting photography in art galleries and museums, selling photographs, lecturing and teaching photography workshops.


PG: What achievements in photography can you mention?

Scott: In college my work has been entered into competitions on my behalf and I have been the recipient of awards as a sideline to exhibits that I’ve been in. I have  been recognized with regional and national awards, most recently at a national exhibition at the Hubbard Museum of the American West (a Smithsonian museum) in New Mexico. I’ve had 7 museum exhibitions so far (including solo), many gallery shows (see my website Scottedwards.us for a list of the most recent) and in January, 2010 I’m being exhibited with master Western painters in Texas.  My work has been published in magazines, newspapers and a book concerning my 2,000 mile walk to the Grand Canyon. I was also awarded 2 residencies and have been a juror at the Milwaukee Art Museum in Wisconsin.

This image illustrates the intriguing effects one can get from selective focus. I angled the image in the viewfinder to exaggerate the motion of the leaves in the wind and to get more of the subject into the frame. Once again, the light is what attracted me to this image in the first place. Notice how it gives the leaves a waxy appearance.

Willow: This image illustrates the intriguing effects one can get from selective focus. I angled the image in the viewfinder to exaggerate the motion of the leaves in the wind and to get more of the subject into the frame. Once again, the light is what attracted me to this image in the first place. Notice how it gives the leaves a waxy appearance.

PG: What are your main interests in photography?

Scott: I only shoot black and white film in large and medium format. Silver prints just rock my world.


PG: What photo equipment do you use?

Scott: My large format cameras include 3 Calumet monorails and a Busch Pressman field camera. My medium format cameras are twin lens Mamiyas, twin lens Zeiss, and a Kodak Tourist. The calumet cameras are bulky but the range of movements on a monorail camera are second to none. It is important to have this feature when shooting close up work for maximum sharpness, or to exaggerate out of focus areas. In my darkroom I have a Kaiser VPM enlarger for medium format work and a Beseler 45MXT for large format.


PG: Do you get to travel much because of photography?

Scott: My work takes me all over the United States. This past summer I traveled to Texas, New Mexico, Alabama, South Dakota, Wyoming and Montana. Next year I plan to travel to the Oregon Coast (again) and to Eastern Europe. National parks in the United States offer the most unspoiled landscape opportunities, but one needs to wander off the beaten path to do some serious uninterrupted photography study. The Oregon Coast remains my favorite place. There are many miles of rocky beaches protected by the Oregon State Park Service. When the fog burns off in the mornings, the landscape takes on an angelic quality with moist rocks and soft light. A virtual smorgasbord of textures.

This is an image I took when I arrived on foot from Wisconsin to the Grand Canyon in Arizona. I wanted to view the canyon looking down without skyline because I have never seen it photographed this way. I waited for the late afternoon light to cast interesting shadows and a softer light to capture the textures in the shadow areas, and gave it a lyrical composition to help the eye travel the entire frame. I don’t incorporate vignetting in any way because I want the viewer to feel as though the image travels off the frame infinitely.

Bright Angel Trail: This is an image I took when I arrived on foot from Wisconsin to the Grand Canyon in Arizona. I wanted to view the canyon looking down without skyline because I have never seen it photographed this way. I waited for the late afternoon light to cast interesting shadows and a softer light to capture the textures in the shadow areas, and gave it a lyrical composition to help the eye travel the entire frame. I don’t incorporate vignetting in any way because I want the viewer to feel as though the image travels off the frame infinitely.

PG: Please any tips or advice you can share.

Scott: In black and white photography, I feel that light quality is the most important; if you don’t have the right light – there is no image. It is also important to remember in any image that, the subject is part of the image…not the total image. One must consider also the frame of reference, negative space (shadows) and any shapes in the image that comprise the composition. Composition is what draws viewers from a distance. As they get closer, more layers in the image present themselves and at close inspection the most minute textures and sharpness should become evident. I try to keep my compositions simple and clean and think like a painter. In my compositions, one will seldom find human beings, because I want to make the image intimate to the viewer. To accomplish this effect, I compose foreground elements that give the viewer a sense of being included  in the image as sort of a first hand account. My compositions almost always start at my feet and end up at the horizon near the top of the frame.


Black and white photography to me is all about contrasts: Contrasting values, textures, subject matter, sharpness and even balance. I’m a big fan of selective focus, because it tends to make the sharp areas of an image sharper, while showing off the bokeh of a particularly excellent lens. People still pay up to $1000 for lenses that are over a century old because of this bokeh quality. I like to juxtapose my focus also, in other words, sharply focus soft textures and render sharp textures as soft. For instance, in an abstraction I did of a cactus, the fine hairs of the cactus are sharply focused, while the spikes are soft. It makes the viewing experience more interesting I think.

Shelter From The Storm: In this image, I am inside a tunnel underneath the highway, that I slept in the previous night to escape a severe thunderstorm. From inside, I wanted to capture the cool cement walls in the immediate foreground to give a sense of place to the viewer, and included the railroad trestle in the background in warm light which juxtaposes the various temperatures together. The distant horizon lends a vastness to the western Kansas landscape.

Shelter From The Storm: In this image, I am inside a tunnel underneath the highway, that I slept in the previous night to escape a severe thunderstorm. From inside, I wanted to capture the cool cement walls in the immediate foreground to give a sense of place to the viewer, and included the railroad trestle in the background in warm light which juxtaposes the various temperatures together. The distant horizon lends a vastness to the western Kansas landscape.

PG: What books and photographers inspired you?

Scott: Books: “Through Another Lens” by Charis Wilson, on the subject of her life with Edward Weston, and “Helmut Newton: Autobiography”.


Edward Weston and Paul Strand are my biggest influences in photography. Currently I enjoy and am inspired by Mona Kuhn, Sally Mann, Sebastian Stachowski, and Ralph Gibson.

Tidepool: This image was captured on the Oregon Coast. The light was low, so I opted to capture the motion of the wave as it crested over the rocks in the forerground. Overexposing by 1 stop gave the image more base fog and gravity, while allowing me to shoot this at 3 second exposure with Efke 25 film set to IE12.

Tidepool: This image was captured on the Oregon Coast. The light was low, so I opted to capture the motion of the wave as it crested over the rocks in the foreground. Overexposing by 1 stop gave the image more base fog and gravity, while allowing me to shoot this at 3 second exposure with Efke 25 film set to EI12.

PG: Your recommendation to those who are in the beginining of their career.

Scott: Shoot what pleases you. Don’t be concerned with what other people want (unless you do commercial work). Your photographs should be fulfilling to you first and foremost.


Photography has the stigma of being associated with journalism and commercial advertising – but it can be art as much as a painting or drawing – its just a different tool. Also, one thinks to “take a picture of this thing or that thing”. I like to collect elements in a photographic composition in such a way as to make them more beautiful than that which can be seen without a camera. The way I compose makes the image mine and nobody else’s. So make your own tripod holes and put your personal signature on everything you shoot.


PG: Thank you very much, Scott.

You will find more works by Scott Edwards on his web site: Scottedwards.us

Andrew 13 October 2009 Scott Edwards Art, Black & White

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This is a place for reading selected photographers’ interviews, illustrated by their best images. Professional and serious amateur artists share:

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If you want to be interviewed, please let us know.

Andrew 19 July 2009 News
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