Photos courtesy of Bob Catlett
2014 Banquet Photos
Photos courtesy of Bob Catlett
Photos courtesy of Bob Catlett
Hunt’s Photo and Video | www.huntsphotoandvideo.com |
Washington School of Photography | www.washingtonschoolofphotography.com |
Capital Photography Center | www.capitalphotographycenter.com |
Plaza Artist Materials | www.plazaart.com/stores/silver-spring |
Hillwood Estate, Museum and Gardens | www.hillwoodmuseum.org |
Regal Cinemas | www.regmovies.com/Theatres/Theatre-Folder/Regal-Majestic-Stadium-20-IMAX-7610 |
Tony Sweet Photography | www.tonysweet.com |
American Film Institute / AFI Silver | www.afi.com/silver |
Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream | www.benjerry.com |
Hoover-Fisher Florist | www.hooverfisherflorist.com |
Charles Needle Photography | www.charlesneedlephoto.com |
Vickie Lewis Photography | www.vickielewis.com |
Ritz Camera | www.ritzcameraandimage.com/store/1124.php |
Steve Gottlieb / Horizon Workshops | www.horizonworkshops.com |
Walt Calahan returns this spring to SSCC not as judge, but as speaker. His topic on May 1 is “The Myth of Thinking Outside the Box.” By this, Walt means that innovation begins and never ends by “mastering the box,” not thinking outside of it. He says we know this as photographers because the camera is our metaphoric “box”; if we don’t master the camera, none of our ideas outside of the camera will be captured successfully by the camera.
This is a viewpoint that Walt puts in practice not only in his own photography but also as a teacher of photography. As an adjunct instructor, he teaches photography for the art departments of both Stevenson University and McDaniel College. He feels that teaching helps insure a love for photography in the next generation of image makers.
Walt Calahan’s career has propelled him on adventures that demand superb mastery of the “box.” His photography assignments have taken him under the Atlantic Ocean aboard a U.S. Navy Trident submarine, down lava tube caves in Idaho, into surgical clinics for Afghan refugees in Peshawar, Pakistan, canoeing the Okefenokee Swamp of Georgia and the great northern woods of Canada, and being launched off the deck of a U.S. Navy aircraft carrier. As if that weren’t enough adventure, Walt has photographed such subjects as the tumult of the Romanian revolution.
Hundreds of magazines have used Walt’s work, including the National Geographic Society, Boys’ Life, Time, Fortune, Smithsonian, Rolling Stone, and Vanity Fair. General Electric, Yamaha, The Washington Performing Arts Society, Hillel Foundation, and Harvard Business School, among others, have commissioned him to illustrate their publications and advertisements.
Walt graduated with honors from Syracuse University’s Newhouse School of Public Communications and then earned a Master of Liberal Arts degree from McDaniel College.
Our wry, edgy judge this month, Gary Landsman, sent in a highly personal, if not downright idiosyncratic, bio for the Cable Release. With only minor edits, here’s Gary Landsman’s take on photography and himself…
Landsman, why?
I get it, been at it over 20 years, shot everything from cockroaches to Presidents. No humor intended.
I’ve lit 737’s for USAirways (the whole plane) and auto parts for AAA. I know what it is to solve big-hassle problems on the fly, where to put a light, how to put a light, how to talk to the cop that needs validation.
I even had a police sergeant loan me his gun and badge for a Time-Life books shoot, hope to heaven his Captain never finds out.
Solve the technical problem, see it fast, and get it done, as often is the requirement.
Location almost always has its caveats. Figuring it out is what I do. Never let the client know the issues unless they need to be involved to solve the problem. They expect me to get it done, on budget, on time and better than they expected.
PERSONALITY
My subjects run the gamut of “been photographed” experiences. Some have been
abused, some ignored, some are ugly, some with
high expectations. I make them all feel at ease, so
I can capture great images of them. That’s likely
my best and unusual character as photographer.
SUMMARY
Light. Comfortable subjects. Ability to get what you need done regardless of parameters and issues.
Our speaker this month is familiar to all SSCC members: Dave Powell, who now runs the Members’ Open Forum on 4th Thursdays. And what a resource he is for SSCC! Dave joined SSCC a couple of years ago as one way to give back to the profession that’s been sustaining him for 50 years. Few of us, however, are familiar with Dave’s background, so we’ve asked him to kick off the new year by talking about his experiences, emphasizing his primary area of interest – lighting and light.
In his decades as a professional photographer, Dave has used a wide range of photo gear, lighting equipment, and film and video equipment. He has shot on assignment in all 48 contiguous states and has photographed in many locations overseas. While now somewhat retired, Dave continues to do limited assignment work for clients.
Dave has used various media to tell stories that illustrate and bring to life the high impact, high visibility, high pressure, and fast moving worlds of business, schools, museums, and government. He helps his clients refine, clarify, and heighten their messages so they can increase sales, boost fund-raising, or educate. Surprising to us, perhaps, is the fact that Dave is far more than a very successful commercial photographer. He’s an award-winning film and documentary maker and the creator and producer of video and multi-screen slide shows. He’s written and edited scripts. He’s served as advisor on AV equipment and graphic software packages. He’s also a web designer and a one-on-one executive coach for public speaking and presentations.
Here an example of a typical assignment for Dave: He created and produced two complex, multiimage, multi-screen slide shows for National Gallery exhibitions, which were used to give historical and thematic perspectives. In another example, Dave created an anti-smoking film commissioned by the government aimed at students – for which he won an Emmy Award. Since 1990, Dave has been the owner of David W. Powell Communications. Earlier, he held the responsibilities of partner in several communications media firms after serving as a producer/director at WETA and Voice of America. Dave’s client list fills pages; outstanding assignments have come from the World Bank, the CIA, University of Maryland, AT&T, British Airways, GEICO, Exxon Corporation, Hillwood Museum, Georgetown University, and the Egyptian government.
In his own education, Dave received his BA in Radio, Television, and Film Production at the University of Maryland, with an emphasis on public speaking and music. He also plays a mean saxophone.
Our March speaker, Alan Sislen, has been an avid photographer for over 45 years. Landscape photography is his passion, and this month he will talk to us about the beauty and challenge of this discipline.
Alan has photographed in the US, France, Iceland, Italy, Canada, England, Chile, South Africa, Botswana, Namibia, and New Zealand. Although his equipment might be state-of-theart, Alan’s style and technique are traditional. He has studied with well known British landscape photographer Charlie Waite, former National Geographic photographer Bruce Dale, digital expert Thom Hogan, black and white master John Sexton, photographic artist and Photoshop expert John Paul Caponigro, fine art photographer Charles Cramer, color management/printing expert Bill Atkinson, and Photoshop expert Eliot Cohen.
In 2005, Alan was juried into Multiple Exposures Gallery at the Torpedo Factory in Alexandria and was then juried into the Torpedo Factory as a Resident Artist in 2006. He is a long-time member of North Bethesda Camera Club, where he has served on the Board and has been selected as Advanced Color Print Photographer of the Year, Black and White Photographer of the Year, and Advanced Electronic Photographer of the Year.
In Alan’s presentation, he will discuss why, after more than four decades of doing photography, he has gravitated to and specializes in landscape photography. He will discuss the equipment he uses, but more importantly, what he looks for in a particular location to try to capture that elusive “great photograph.” Pre-planning is always a major part of landscape photography, and Alan will talk about all the variables that should be considered and how to deal with the unpredicted events that always occur.
For a landscape photographer, more important than the scene that’s being photographed is the light on the scene that’s being photographed. He will use many examples throughout his presentation to demonstrate this critical element, as well as other important topics such as composition, aspect ratio, mood, and emotion, all of which can help make what might be an ordinary photograph, extraordinary.
Alan’s photography may be seen at his web site:
www.AlanSislenPhotography.com
Member, Photographic Society of America