an imageteller captures image celebrations.

sharing image tales broadens an artistic expression.

doing so, brings this particular creative indescribable joy.

what is your image story? perhaps I can help you tell it! 

 

 

Car On The Road

December 17, 2014  •  Leave a Comment

I was commissioned this fall to capture a curve in the road,a beloved view for a local commuter.

 

I went to the site three times hoping to get a sense of summer and fall.

 

I love the outtakes of the last shoot, the baby deer crossing, the barbed wire, the shadow portrait of the photographer, but as I was looking at the entire portfolio today...

 

I noticed that I also captured the same car from two different sets. 

 

 

 

WOW - what's the likelihood of that?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Photographer For Hire

November 28, 2014  •  3 Comments

Photographer seeks freelance opportunities.

 

I love what I do. Providing gorgeous images to tell your story is my passion. I especially enjoy working with clients who are deeply connected with what they do. 

( Coffee Hound anniversary event - catered by Two Blokes and A Bus - Bloomington, IL)

 

I take great joy in helping to visually share the details of, for example, running an organic farm, keeping bees, or hand-crafting cheese. My clients include bakers, soap makers, artists, gardeners, café owners, and folks developing small businesses. Together we have taken the telling of their stories to another level by presenting images that express what makes them (and their business and products) unique.

( Goat milking at sunrise - Dancing Rabbit Eco-Village, Rutledge. MO) 

 

Have you found yourself in need of a really good image for an article, your website, a blog post, an application for a show, or simply to explain you and your product? Perhaps you do not have the time or skill to take the photos and then crop and manipulate them into just what you need? You may have thought to yourself, wow – a library of images would be really useful for my work right now.

( organic swiss chard - Ackerman farm, Chenoa, IL )

 

This is where I come in!  I want to help

As a matter of fact I REALLY want to be part of what you are doing. 

(Mrs. Milkweed's delicious jams - Milkweed Mercantile INN - Rutledge, MO) 

 

Great idea - right?  Yet you hesitate because hiring a photographer isn’t something you planned or budgeted for. Not to worry.  While I don’t work for free I am completely willing to barter.  Cash for my time and effort and gas money are all part of a negotiation.  Fresh eggs make me very happy.  I have the freedom and flexibility to immerse myself into your project.  Not all photographers can say that.

Let's talk!

 

( campaign for allowing backyard chickens )

 

"I love Karen's close up and personal style"

"Karen has such a great enthusiasm for her projects"

"Karen's work is vibrant, distinct and dynamic"

"She really champions the clients she photographs for"

"These were exactly the photographs I needed for my book"

( Peeling paint - barn built around 1865 - Walnut Grove Farm - Knoxville, IL) 

 

My portfolio is large, so if you will let me know your interests, I can send you direct links to specific examples of my work.

 

References available upon request.

(Sunflower house - West Side - Bloomington, IL)

 


The Gift Of A New Camera

November 27, 2014  •  Leave a Comment

this arrived in the mail.  

as a gift.

the note inside said, 

"i hope that this camera will unleash your creative impulses and give you the professional results you need and deserve"

wow.

when i asked my benefactor WHY he said, 

"I have always enjoyed gift-giving. The best gift, IMHO, is something that the recipient would enjoy but wouldn't (or couldn't) buy for themselves.

I like you, and I feel sympathetic towards your situation and your struggle. 

While I can't contribute towards your mortgage, cameras are something I know a lot about and I am certain that this camera can do you a lot of good.

It can open up new vistas for your artistry."

MORE wow.

GRATEFUL.

 

 

 

 

 

 


Artist Reception A Success!

November 12, 2014  •  1 Comment

My artwork was selected for the very first time to hang at a Chicago gallery.  How cool is that?

This past Saturday was the Artist Reception

The phrase don't sweat the small stuff might want to be tattooed on my forehead.

What can I say?  

I was nervous.

The expense of 4 small prints, matting, framing and shipping was not in my budget. That might sound like a complaint. It isn't. It's simply a current reality for me.

We chose to travel a fair distance to participate. It was a 14 hour/ 500 mile day for us actually, add that extra bit of gasoline and city dining and that was more cash to spend. Oh, and we got a parking ticket. UGH. Which I contested.  But still. These are the realities of city life.  I have not one ounce of regret for taking the trek. It was SUCH a tremendous day.

We had to secure dog care for Odessa - which we had only done once before - she did fine.  I had to decide on the right outfit (in the scheme of things this was the largest thing I worried about.) Why do I do that? Does anyone really remember what I wore?? I do. As you know, this is all about me!

Another challenge for me was settling into the unknown social scene of a gallery. I admit that I might want to do a little reading on how to make the most of a gallery hanging as an artist.  Besides hovering near ones work, which is probably not such a good idea,  I really didn't know how to behave. I felt that the deepest darkest most introvert part of me came out to play, or not play to be more accurate. I acted like something between a total wall flower and a ridiculously nervous adolescent. This was my regret as I left the event.  Where did my normal confident outgoing gregarious self go? More UGH.

Fortunately, Art has a way of speaking for itself.  The work once hanging is not about me.  It's about what the images evoke for the viewer, and more so, how the images belong to the larger topic chosen by the curators.  In that sense I felt like I totally belonged.  

  

From the galleries website:  

EAT, DRINK, and BE MERRY showcases a breadth of work from contemporary still life to the surreal.  Artists like Richard Laurent, Alan Teger, and Laura Collins focus their subject on the enjoyment food brings through pithy humor.  However, other works in the exhibition focus on the ethical dilemmas of consumption that may often be overlooked as we celebrate the holidays.

Pamela Johnson’s larger than life junk food paintings reflect our gluttonous urge for immediate gratification without regard for consequence.  The heightened realism of her paintings serves as a mirror to our culture’s insatiable overindulgence.

The documentary photography of Alexandra Buxbaum and Karen Hanrahan further intensifies focus on mass-production and consumption. These images shed light on the issues of production that is often a taboo subject. As demand for food increases, factory and industrialized farming becomes increasingly common as we continue to feed a growing, hungry human population.

Food culture becomes emphasized as we gather for the holidays and EAT, DRINK, and BE MERRY celebrates and analyzes this common thread that unites our society.

EAT, DRINK, and BE MERRY is curated by Gallery Director Chris Jackson, Gallery Artist Laura Junge and Assistant Director Scott Renfro.

Exhibiting artists include: Lilla Dent, CJ Hungerman, Thomas Robert Meyers, Erin Elizabeth, Alexandra Buxbaum, Kate Tully, Rita Dianni-Kaleel, Karen Hanrahan, Richard Laurent, Alan Teger, Eric Cooney, Benjamin Madeska, Pamela Johnson, Judith Gries, Laura Collins

Kudos to the gallery for many many things:

My name was mentioned as a photo journalist on their website ( pinch me!).  The gallery was a deliciously happening space. Really really lovely. The curb appeal and street scene was super bustling.  Definitely looked and felt like the place to be!

My work was designated very well.  I LOVED the placement of certain processed food nosh next to art.  The platter next to my work was loaded with chicken tenders! How positively perfect!! This bit of humor and irony played very well I thought with the exhibition and conversation. I enjoyed the contact I had with the other artists. 

My guy was with me, I was so grateful not only for his loving company and his truly beaming pride. He also had a very patient listening for all my nervous chatter. I seriously never stopped talking. AND I admit he looked really super all decked out for the occasion.  As part of the day we met my son and dined at a favorite burger joint nearby. A total and absolute blast, and then both of them were with me taking it all in. My daughter and many others were there in spirit or virtually. My dear Chicago friends - the White family popped in, and I have to say seeing them huddled around my work almost made me cry.  Not sure what that was about, but my appreciation was at an all time high in that moment. Love that they came. 

 

 

I could have should have taken more pictures - don't know why I didn't. UGH. 

 

A shout out to Dancing Rabbit's Blog known as March Hare  - I guest posted last week! 

Thank you again Jackson Junge Gallery for including my work in the exhibit  "Eat, Drink and Be Merry"

Keep in mind that the exhibit is there until January 4th.

Perhaps you can stop in and check it out! 

 


Artists Include Karen Hanrahan

October 27, 2014  •  Leave a Comment

Don't know about you, but i REALLY like seeing my name in print.  

Started when i got my first phone in the late 70's. Yes,  I was one of those that loved seeing my name in the phone book!! I still do, these days I get to see my name in other places - like ...on FB, or on watermarks on my photographs, as an author of a post I've written or like today when I enthusiastically discovered my name included in the list of artists that are exhibiting together at Jackson Junge Gallery around the theme Eat, Drink and Be Merry.  

I was told that over 200 artists submitted artwork for this show from around the world. WOW!

When I submitted my images I wrote about my relationship to food. Coming from suburbia my knowledge of where my food came from was nill.  Food came from the store. Period. In recent years that relationship has shifted,  partly because of exposure to a vibrant farmers market, but more so, to the farmers who work so hard to be at that market.  I began to practice local and seasonal eating.  Something i think many of us take for granted. Thanks to my artist residency last fall - I witnessed an expanded expression of food processing from folks raising their own meat.  

I was out on photography walk when Ziggy walked by holding these two chickens.

I said,  "are you?"

He said,  "yes!", 

i asked "may I?"

He said, "of course"

and there I go..

in my commentary with my image submission to the gallery I wrote:  "I didn't have a whole lot of time to decide how I felt about watching animals being butchered, it was happening and I was capturing it"

The fact is I could have been grossed out. Instead I found it rather beautiful. This showed up in my photography!

If you are curious to see the entire set  ( note: there is a muscovy duck processing set in there too)

Click HERE

 

 

Photography = a never ending opportunity to capture visual celebrations. 

 

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