JVC Professional Video Appoints Kelli Matthews As Marketing Manager
By Admin in Art World News
By Admin in Photography
By Admin in Photography
Do you wonder about the world of animals and nature, and how you can learn more about it? Many of us resort to our cameras to catch hold of a wondrous moment we are delighted to witness. When it comes to photography, one of the most challenging aspects of it is wildlife photography. If you wish to pursue it as a profession, it is really important to first practise, practise, practise… before you get that perfect shot!

For a wildlife enthusiast, being able to capture wildlife in a picture is a remarkable achievement in itself. The moment a camera is in your hand, the only thought is to get the animal in the best frame at the right time. But remember, animals in the wild are unpredictable, and so are their movements.
There are many factors that come into play for a photographer who ventures into the animals’ habitat. Apart from being observant about animal movements, it is also the weather, the environment, the lighting and one’s own patience that counts. While photographing the wild, one is bound to learn how to be patient and calm, and most of all, value each mistake as a learning.

Starting point
Wildlife photography is a great way to connect with the wild. To become a professional photographer, here are some of the first essential steps to take:
Develop your skills: Start off by taking pictures of still life, trees, people, landscape and everything around you that you find interesting. This helps to explore the different features that your camera has, and how to best capture your subject in a frame. If you’re using a digital camera, familiarise yourself with editing softwares to further enhance the captured photograph.
Start with birds: Wildlife photography involves taking pictures of the wild in their natural habitat. It is unquestionably the most dynamic space to be within, and requires the utmost attention and speed to capture an animal in action. One can cultivate these skills by beginning with backyard bird photography. Observing birds and their behaviour and practising taking pictures of them can build confidence as well as a flair for photography.
Attend workshops: Tutorials, guides and information on photography can be found everywhere around us, both online and offline! Attending different workshops is sure to hone your skills. Listening to the first-hand experiences of professional photographers can help you find your own creative path within this industry.
Patience is the key: While there is a lot to learn from various textual sources and academic courses on photography, the single most significant asset that every wildlife photographer requires is patience. The jungle is full of surprises, as a wildlife explorer, nature walker and even a bird watcher would tell you, but it takes a lot of will, time and dedication before one witnesses the results of their effort. Sitting in one place for hours only to get a glimpse of a big cat is an earnest commitment.
Get to know the wild: Reading about the wild destination, its climate, and the various flora and fauna species that are likely to be found there is crucial before one reaches the spot to get some shots. Knowing about animal behaviour and making sure that routine activities of wild animals are never disturbed during photography sessions form ethical foundations for wildlife photography. Whether it is a forest or a sanctuary, we must know the guidelines that need to be strictly followed within these areas. It is also necessary to be aware of what one can do in case of an unexpected close encounter with a wild animal.

Wildlife photography is applauded and appreciated in its entirety only when it is done ethically. It is therefore necessary to know and follow an ethical code of conduct while photographing animals. Wildlife photography involves going into the homes of animals, and we must remain sensitive and respectful of them.
While we fulfil our dream to capture and showcase photographs from the wild, we also carry a responsibility of sharing valuable knowledge on the subjects of our pictures. Wildlife photographers continue to play a huge role in conserving wild animals and their natural habitat.
On the occasion of Nature Photography Day, we encourage those who aim to take up wildlife photography with passion and curiosity. To this end, Wildlife SOS has invited entries for a photography contest on the theme of “Urban Wildlife”. To know more, follow us on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.


Keziah Kelsey’s love of animals is what got her to attend a Longview Museum of Fine Arts class for the first time Wednesday, she said.
“I wanted to see what it looked like because I love drawing animals,” the 9-year-old said. “I love animals- all kinds, except for poisonous snakes.”
She was busy coloring a kookaburra, a bird native to Australia, after just completing the outline of the bird.
Keziah is one of the students enrolled in “Walk on the Wild Side!,” one of numerous classes offered by the Longview Museum of Fine Arts as part of its Youth Education & Summer Art Program.
The summer classes kicked off last week and will run until August 3.
The classes for various age groups are offered at various times throughout the summer months.
“Walk on the Wild Side!,” which is set to end tomorrow, is described as a class in which students “explore creative approaches to unleash their inner artists by creating their own spirit animals by studying line, pattern, color, and inspiration with collage and drawing.”
Before starting their craft, Keziah and the other students learned about animals native to Australia and how native Aboriginals depicted animals through art. Instructor Mark Nesmith explained to students Aboriginal animal paintings are unique in the way the interior is typically decorated with horizontal or vertical lines, while the exterior is outlined with a series of dots.
After the lesson, each child picked the animal they wanted to draw from options that included a kangaroo, dolphin, koala bear, echidna and more.
Keziah chose the Kookaburra because she likes birds and also because her cat recently caught a cardinal, she said with a laugh.
Josiah Davis, 7, sat next to her and was also busy at work on a Kookabura. He said he planned to color his blue and was considering what other color to add to it.
He said he chose the animal because “I love birds and I want to fly with my dreams.”
Nearby, friends Cheyanne Bradley, 9, and Hannah McDonald, 10, were coloring in a kangaroo and turtle respectively. According to Cheyanne, the two friends attended the program last year as well.
While Cheyannae planned to make a rainbow kangaroo, Hannah was sticking to using two shades of green for her turtle. She said she enjoyed attending the program because she gets to draw- an activity she considers calming.
Nesmith walked among the students giving pointers and answering questions. Hailing from Beaumont, he’s the museum’s visiting artist for the summer. He teaches several of the summer classes and helps coordinate the rest of the ones he doesn’t teach, among other things, he said.
Since working with the children, he said he’s had a blast and that attendance appears to be steadily increasing.
“Words has been getting out, I think they’ve been spreading the idea ’cause we’ve had a lot more kids this week than last week so enrollment’s been going up,” he said.
According to Nesmith, roughly 150 to 160 children are currently signed up for the summer program, a number he hopes to see reach 200.
Ideas and knowledge from various disciplines are incorporated into the classes, which offers a good way to make connections to other topics, he said. For instance, students have learned about patterns, which is discussed in math class, aspects of color that relate to science along with the transparency of watercolor painting.
“So it’s a fun, creative way of also getting some knowledge in too,” Nesmith said. “And it’s great for me ’cause these guys are rejuvenating. They come in, they’re smiling, ready to get into it so you can’t have a bad time.”
By Admin in Printmaking
By Admin in Art World News
Vultures descend on NYBG’s Enid A. Haupt Conservatory lawn in an installation by Ebony G. Patterson
This summer at the New York Botanical Garden, celebrated contemporary artist Ebony G. Patterson alludes to the hidden histories of the garden in …things come to thrive…in the shedding…in the molting…, featuring thought-provoking sculptures and horticulture displays. The artist responds to the collections of the garden with a living work of art that sheds light on the historical relevance of our collective pasts and the potential for healing in renewal.
Patterson’s work embraces the lush, colorful, and enticing elements of the space while offering bold and provocative moments. Hundreds of glittering vultures descend like shadows to gather among wound-like ruptures in the landscape. Colorful plantings and ghostly cast glass sculptures represent extinct species that now exist only as specimens in the Herbarium, serving as a reminder of what we stand to lose. Displays in the LuEsther T. Mertz Library feature an immersive video installation, woven tapestries, and paper works that continue Patterson’s artistic viewpoint on gardens and wild, uncultivated nature.
You have never experienced the New York Botanical Garden like this before!
…things come to thrive…in the shedding…in the molting… is on view through September 17.
To learn more, visit nybg.org.




Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $5 per month. The article Don’t Miss Ebony G. Patterson’s Summer Art Exhibition at the New York Botanical Garden appeared first on Colossal.
By Admin in Art World News
In the blistering Texas heat, on a Saturday afternoon, Asian American creatives strolled into the coffee shop Civil Pour in Dallas for a Dallas Asian American Art Club meeting.
“I’m just really excited to meet everyone else,” said Evangelina Hsu, who is Taiwanese American and has worked as a 3-D artist. She has an online shop where she sells food-themed stickers and merchandise she designs, which depict everything from the ramen in the Studio Ghibli movie “Ponyo“ to Japanese fruit sandwiches.
The Dallas Asian American Art Club, which was launched in February by Christina Hahn, started out with just a handful of people. Now, it’s a once or twice-a-month gathering of about 15 Gen-Z and Millenials. It’s a space where people can pursue their creative interests in their own way, whether they want to socialize, work on their latest project or just get feedback.
“It’s just anyone who is Asian American and wants to be creative. You don’t even have to do that as your full-time job,” Hahn said.
Emily Nava
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KERA
Hahn, who is Korean American and the creative director of the Dallas Asian American Historical Society, said she created the club because she struggled to find people who shared the same cultural fluency to challenge her work in a nuanced way.
“How a lot of Americans view Asian art and being Asian is very flat and very stereotypical,” she said. “So how do we move beyond that and how do we create art that is uniquely Asian American? I need people who are uniquely Asian American to be able to give me that type of feedback.”
For Asian American creatives, embracing their distinctive voice can feel like an act of defiance. On one hand, there’s defying the cultural pressure from parents and relatives to pursue non-creative jobs.
“I grew up with that same narrative of, like, ‘Art is not a sustainable field.’ ‘There is no way that you’re going to be able to put food on the table,’ ” said Rachel Tse, a graphic designer for a Dallas-based agency. “So I feel like my entire life I have been rebelling against that narrative or that voice inside my head.”
On the other hand, Asian American creatives are defying stereotypes.
“You look at all of the major culture that is going on today in America that a lot of it has Asian roots,” Hahn said. “So why are you trying to say that we’re not creative just because y’all prefer us to be crunching numbers for you or being tidy for you?”
Tse, who is Chinese American, said the club is exactly the kind of space she needed starting out. She is currently working with a friend on an apparel line they hope to launch this year.
Emily Nava
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KERA
Krishna Narra, who is Indian American, works in Dallas as a digital marketing specialist and is also an actor, writer, filmmaker and poet.
He recently wrote a collection of acrostic poems called “Linguistic Therapy” based on 50 words from his native language of Telugu.
“So my sales pitch is even if the poems are bad, you learn 50 words of a different language,” he said with a chuckle.
For Narra, who recently relocated from Houston, the club and Dallas at large is where he’s coming into his own as an artist.
“In Dallas, it’s like where I’ve actually gotten to see, OK, what can I bring to another space or where am I? Like, me kind of discovering my actual voice.”
Emily Nava
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KERA
The club also celebrates that Asian American creatives and their work don’t need to look one way. Judy Liu, who is Taiwanese Chinese, balances being a writer and a full-time job as a compliance program manager. Last year, she published an Asian Western young-adult sci-fi novel “The Vending Portal.”
“I wanted something that was unapologetically Asian Western, like no need to explain anything else,” she said. “I just wanted a story that we could all relate to a little more.”
Hahn said in the future, she hopes to host an art market and create an exhibition featuring artists from the club.
“I want people to feel not alone,” Hahn said. “That’s my No. 1 priority, that you can be all of who you are and do all of what you want to do.”
Want to join the Dallas Asian American Art Club? Follow @daaartclub on Instagram.
Arts Access is an arts journalism collaboration powered by The Dallas Morning News and KERA.
This community-funded journalism initiative is funded by the Better Together Fund, Carol & Don Glendenning, City of Dallas OAC, Communities Foundation of Texas, The Dallas Foundation, Eugene McDermott Foundation, James & Gayle Halperin Foundation, Jennifer & Peter Altabef and The Meadows Foundation. The News and KERA retain full editorial control of Arts Access’ journalism.
By Admin in Photography
The Grand Canyon Photography Club has announced the winners of its juried competition show and display, currently at the Gmeiner Arts and Cultural Center, Wellsboro until June 25.
This year’s awards featured six categories. Twenty members presented 73 entries to the independent judges. The judges reported afterwards that this photo display is one of the best they have ever judged.
This year’s winner’s list includes many new members of the club as well as members who have been mainstays in the organization. Each of the winners received a custom embroidered patch of the club’s logo.
The complete winners list follows:
The Grand Canyon Photography Club was founded with the help of Art and Christine Heiny and has been active for over 20 years. Members meet the second Tuesday of the month at the Gmeiner Arts and Cultural Center. Its purpose is to advance the art of photography among its members, develop their photography skills, and promote photography as an enjoyable recreational experience.
The photo club always welcomes new members. Congratulations to all members whose prints were accepted into the show. The next club photography show is scheduled for summer 2025.

While the jewelry fad has waned, artisans continue to make designs in silver and turquoise.
ALBUQUERQUE — Someday, Andrew Thomas plans to have a silver watch cuff custom-made in memory of his father. It won’t be an exact reproduction of the one his father wore, he said, but it will reflect the same traditional Diné (Navajo) style, perhaps with nugget turquoise, a touch of coral and some silver appliqué work.
“I’m still designing it in my head,” said Mr. Thomas, 61, who works as a buyer at the Indian Pueblo Store, in the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center here.
Mr. Thomas said he owned turquoise-studded bracelets given to him by each of his parents, Frank and Clara Mae Thomas, but the watch cuff (which now belongs to one of his brothers) is something he especially associates with his father. When he sees someone wearing a similar piece, he said in an interview, it takes him back to his upbringing on the Navajo Nation and the life lessons his father taught him.
“As you grow older, you always get reminded of where you’re from,” he added.
The timepiece was a Bulova, Mr. Thomas said: Frank Thomas worked for the Santa Fe Railway for years, driving a truck that transported rail workers to and from their jobs, and the company offered employee discounts on the watches to help keep everything on schedule. Mr. Thomas said he did not know who made the watch cuff, but “it was a perfect fit for my dad, and he was proud of it.”
Nowadays, these types of lavishly decorated watch cuffs or watch bracelets in heavy-gauge silver are mostly sold as vintage pieces or made to order. But some art galleries and shops in the southwestern United States, including the Indian Pueblo Store, still carry a selection of watches adorned with what are called watch tips: two curved pieces of silver attached to either side of the watch case and secured to a manufactured watchband, often made of stainless steel.
Bennard Dallasvuyaoma, a lapidary and silversmith in Albuquerque who belongs to the Hopi and Pima tribes of Arizona, believes that watch tips originated in the 1960s or 1970s, when Native American jewelry was growing in popularity and customers were demanding all sorts of new items.
“Everything came out of a customer’s needs,” he said. “They wanted watch tips, they wanted money clips, they wanted everything that you can imagine in jewelry design.”
Mr. Dallasvuyaoma, 72, said he made many sets of watch tips over the years, most as special orders, but these were becoming increasingly rare. Earlier this year, he finished a set of tips for a customer’s Timex, with a Hopi silver-on-silver overlay design featuring badger claws on one side of the watch face and a design with two arrows on the other. The tips can be attached to either a leather strap or a titanium bracelet, both of which were provided by the customer. Before that order, he said, it had probably been more than a year since he had made a set.
With the advent of smartwatches and the proliferation of watch designs, watch tips are trickier to make now, he said, because it is harder to find the right hardware to attach the metal to the timepiece. And now that many wristwatches are essentially computers, people tend to think more about what a watch can do than what the band looks like, said Mr. Dallasvuyaoma, who wears an Apple Watch.
“The market changes, we change,” he added.
Some Native American jewelers, though, have started venturing into accessories for smartwatches. That is the case with Shane R. Hendren, a Diné silversmith and lifelong rancher whose studio is in a semirural area just south of Albuquerque, where he keeps a few horses, calves and goats.
In the 1990s, Mr. Hendren said, women’s watches were part of his regular inventory; he would buy Japanese timepieces wholesale and then make watchbands out of silver, with turquoise inlay. But he discontinued them when customers turned to cellphones to tell time.
“I’m not going to make something that doesn’t sell. It’s Business 101,” he said. “Now the only ones I make are custom orders.”
Recently, though, he has designed and made half a dozen bands for smartwatches — including a very personal one. His daughter Casey asked him to make it in honor of her older brother and Mr. Hendren’s only son, Cody Hendren, who died in a horse-riding accident three years ago, at age 28.
Ms. Hendren, now 22, said that during her high school summer vacations she would work alongside her brother on ranches across New Mexico. She asked her father to incorporate an image of a bronc rider and the siblings’ shared initials, C.R.H., on the band “so I could have a piece of him with me all the time.”
Two silver panels, curved to fit Ms. Hendren’s wrist, frame the watch and connect to a leather watchband. The initials on one panel and the horse and rider on the other were engraved by hand in gold and overlaid on a decorative background of engraved silver.
“If you really look closely at it and you look at the bronc rider’s face, he’s smiling,” Ms. Hendren said. “And the way that my dad shaped the cowboy hat on the bronc rider is exactly how my brother’s hat used to be shaped.” On the reverse side of the silver pieces, her father engraved messages just for her: “Love 4 Life” on one side and “Live 4 Love” on the other.
Mr. Hendren, 52, has also made other pieces for clients’ smartwatches, including one with faceted sapphires and a peace sign and another showcasing a ranch owner’s brand. Native American watch jewelry may not be as ubiquitous as it once was, he said, but it is hardly obsolete.
“Humans like things that are personalized,” he said. “As long as there’s guys like me that can make something custom, there’s somebody out there who’s going to find me.”
Silver watch cuffs and bracelets entered the repertoire of Southwest Native American jewelry around the 1930s, when the Route 66 highway — which ran from Chicago through Los Angeles — began to attract tourism on a large scale.
“Native American jewelry was starting to be seen outside of just the Southwest region,” said Emerald Tanner of Tanner’s Indian Arts in Gallup, N.M. She and her parents, Joe Sr. and Cindy Tanner, own and operate the family business, following in the footsteps of generations of Tanners who have traded and sold Southwest Native American art since 1872.
For the most part, watches have been “a niche market,” Emerald Tanner said, with interest peaking in the 1970s. During a video interview, she and her father displayed watch jewelry from several eras: an ornate Navajo silver cuff from the 1930s, its timepiece replaced by a large green turquoise stone from the King’s Manassa mine in Colorado; a women’s watch cuff from the late 1950s or early 1960s made by a Zuni Pueblo artist, with 60 hand-cut cabochons of bright-blue Sleeping Beauty Arizona turquoise, each set with its own bezel; and a Zuni his-and-hers set of watch link bracelets from the 1970s showcasing coral, turquoise, jet, mother-of-pearl, malachite, abalone shell, sugilite and lapis lazuli inlaid in geometric patterns.
Over the years, collectors periodically have approached the Tanners, looking for artists who could translate their ideas into jewelry. More than 40 years ago, a collector named R. C. Cannady asked about a watch bracelet, and the Tanners introduced him to a young Diné jeweler named Raymond C. Yazzie, who was doing lapidary work for them at the time.
Mr. Cannady lent the watch bracelet, as well as a companion bolo tie, belt buckle and ring, to the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of the American Indian in New York City for a 2014 exhibition called “Glittering World: Navajo Jewelry of the Yazzie Family.”
In separate interviews, Mr. Cannady, Mr. Yazzie and the Tanners talked about the creation of the watch set, which the artist called Realm of the Gods because the pieces were embellished with symbols representing several Native American deities. Some details varied with the teller, but the broad strokes were the same.
Cindy Tanner remembered that Mr. Cannady had come in with some drawings and a long wish list: The bracelet should be 14-karat gold and include turquoise from several different mines, six one-carat diamonds and a gold coin — “and he didn’t want it to be gaudy,” she said.
Mr. Yazzie, now 63, said he was about 17 when he first met Mr. Cannady, and the collector seemed skeptical. “He had this look on his face like, ‘You’re telling me this young kid is going to do a watch bracelet for me?’”
Speaking from his home in LaGrange, Ga., Mr. Cannady, 87, said that he was interested in “something that was truly outstanding and a one-of-a-kind piece,” and he wanted to make sure the artist was willing to take on the responsibility.
Mr. Yazzie was. Over the course of three or four years — with a lot of back-and-forth consultation with Mr. Tanner, according to Mr. Yazzie — the jeweler would make the four pieces, inlaying about 2,000 tiny stones that he had cut and polished. Most of the stones are turquoise, predominantly from the Blue Gem mine in Nevada, though the pieces also have some lapis lazuli and Mediterranean coral.
The watch bracelet is the highlight of the four-piece set, said Mr. Cannady, who described the ensemble as something that “makes everybody else in the room tiptoe.”
In the center of the bracelet, Mr. Cannady said, is a thin gold timepiece set inside a hollowed-out U.S. $20 coin, a design by Augustus Saint-Gaudens known as the double eagle. He declined to give many details about his purchase of the coin watch, but he said he had first heard about it in Switzerland, tracked it down and bought it from a jeweler.
Mr. Cannady, who built an aviation business and traveled the world for decades, said the set was for sale (asking price: $500,000) — and he hoped that the eventual buyer would be as proud to wear it as he has been rather than just locking it away in a vault.
“I have a certain amount of braggadocio built into me,” he said. “Wherever I wanted to stand out, by golly I wore it.”
Mr. Yazzie, for his part, called the set “one of the premier pieces of my life” and marveled that he had been able to produce work like that at such a young age. “Even when I look at it today, there’s nothing wrong with it,” he said. “There’s nothing different I could do.”
Milwaukee Art Museum announces new Herzfeld Center for Photography show
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The loon traveled from Los Angeles to its permanent home in the Twin Cities.
A new beetle species has been named to honor a fellow Husker, bridging the worlds of academia and wildlife conservation.
Silversea, a premier brand in experiential luxury and expedition travel, recently concluded the inaugural season of its first Nova-class ship, Silver Nova,
Silversea, a premier brand in experiential luxury and expedition travel, recently concluded the inaugural season of its first Nova-class ship, Silver Nova,
The Desert Foothills Land Trust (DFLT) is proud to announce a special presentation event featuring acclaimed botanical photographer Jimmy Fike on Saturday, Oct. 12 at 6:30 p.m. at the Sanderson