
Actually, sunlight flickering on the water.
Posted in Inspiration, Nature Notes, On the Road, tagged Miami, Photography, reflection, sunlight, visual art on February 1, 2011| Leave a Comment »
Posted in Books I Love, Inspiration, Nature Notes, Photography, Publication Updates, tagged colors, nature, photography book, pink, visual art on January 26, 2011| Leave a Comment »

Just in time for Valentine’s Day. 😉
Pink , a little book bursting with color. Check it out. There’s a full preview available online.
Posted in Contributing Writer, Inspiration, Nature Notes, On the Road, Photography, Publication Updates, tagged collaboration, Creativity Portal, Inspiration, nature, Photography on January 25, 2011| 1 Comment »
A new article is available for viewing online at Creativity Portal on finding inspiration through collaboration. Enjoy!
Posted in Branches, Inspiration, Nature Notes, tagged abstract art, nature, Photography on January 24, 2011| 1 Comment »
A mad day of rushing about, but every now and then, I could pull out my camera to snap a few abstract shots. It is bitterly cold up here in New England, but the sun sure is shining beautifully.

Birch branches in a courtyard.

A leaf submerged in a glass.

A dusty memento found.
Posted in Books I Love, Branches, Inspiration, Nature Notes, tagged Blexbolex, colors, graphic design, Mary Oliver, seasons, Swan, visual art on January 23, 2011| Leave a Comment »

Well, one benefit of three major snowstorms in a row is that I’ve spent a lot of time indoors catching up on my reading.
One of my favorite finds is Seasons by French artist Blexbolex. Â The interior of the book is lovely, but it is in the exterior cover image that I lose myself.
It is categorized as a picture book for children, of silkscreen art depicting life and nature throughout the seasons, but I think many adults would find it fascinating as well. Â Given the pink font inside, and the pink on the cover, maybe Blexbolex’s book spurred my current interest in pink!
“The leaf has a song in it.” Â For that line alone, from the poem What Can I say, I am grateful to Mary Oliver.
Each poem in the slim volume is thought-provoking and insightful about Oliver as an individual, as well as about humanity. She inspires the writer in me as well as the photographer.
One day I’d like to do a series of photographs inspired by her poetry. This is what I wrote about my first encounter with Mary Oliver back in 2006.
Posted in Inspiration, Nature Notes, Photography, Photography Exhibits, Publication Updates, tagged colors, nature, Pantone, photo books, Photography, pink, visual art on January 17, 2011| Leave a Comment »
Pink has been on my mind of late. It is not a color I normally wear or buy in any form. But as I perused my photos as part of creating a new photo book, I noticed that in nature, I am drawn toward the color, from rosy clouds in the sky to pink petals, leaves and blossoms on earth.



Oddly enough, as I researched the color, I learned that Pantone has announced its 2011 Color of the Year as a Honeysuckle Pink. My pink book is still very much a work in progress. My goal: to produce a quality product ready in time for spring open studios. We’ll see!
Posted in Inspiration, Nature Notes, On the Road, tagged landscape, Massachusetts, nature, Photography, solitude, Spot Pond, water on January 10, 2011| 1 Comment »
Posted in Branches, Inspiration, Nature Notes, On the Road, tagged Castle Island, Photography, rainbow, South Boston, winter landscape on January 9, 2011| 1 Comment »
Posted in Inspiration, Music, Nature Notes, tagged A Change is Gonna Come, African American experience, Delia's Tears, hope, Inspiration, Old Man River, Paul Robeson, Photography, Sam Cooke, Show Boat, slavery, sunday musings on January 9, 2011| 2 Comments »

Recently for the first time as an adult, I saw the movie musical Showboat. Its most famous song is “Old Man River,” sung by Paul Robeson. If you have not heard the song as sung by him, I encourage you to listen just once. Similarly, I encourage you to listen to Sam Cooke’s rendition of “A Change is Gonna Come.” Despite the hardships, the pain, the unbearable burdens of this life captured in these and so many other songs about the African American experience in the U.S., there is always an underlying thread of hope that one can withstand the hardship, if only to give one’s offspring a chance at a better life.
Hope is on my mind quite a bit this Sunday and not just because I’ve been listening to old songs.  I read an excellent query posed by Dave Mance III, editor of Northern Woodlands Magazine. He asks what gives the readers of the magazine hope. (Read more here.) As I started to think about my answer, negro spirituals popped into my head, but so did the cover image of the book, Delia’s Tears, a book about race, science and photography in nineteenth century America.


The focus of the book is fifteen images discovered in the attic of Harvard University’s Peabody Museum in 1976. Today, they are iconic images. If you have ever watched a PBS program on slavery, you have probably seen the faces. I admit I accepted the visage of these slaves without thought to who they were and where they lived. I accepted them as representative without thinking of them as individual. But they were individuals. Slaves on 1850 Columbia, South Carolina plantations photographed for a revered Harvard University professor convinced that Africans were biologically inferior. When I look into their eyes, I wonder where these individuals found hope. I wonder where my own slave ancestors found hope as they worked in Virginia and North Carolina.
I find hope in the sunrise and sunset. The light that leaks in through a window, that dots the midnight sky. I know it sounds hokey but it is true. Even if my eyes are closed, if I can feel the sun’s rays, there is something hopeful in the sensation. And maybe that’s it, at least for me. There’s something about simply interacting with the world — seeing the possibilities, feeling them, hearing the stories of others –that inspires a sense of one day, just maybe, that possibility might come true for me or for the ones I care about in this world.
Anyway, that’s my random musings on a sunny Sunday in Massachusetts. Wherever you are in the world, hope you’re having a good day.
Posted in Inspiration, Nature Notes, Postcards, tagged Boston Public Library, correspondence, Photography, Postcards on January 7, 2011| Leave a Comment »
In the lobby of the Boston Public Library, you’ll currently find an exhibit of vintage postcards. As I walked through the exhibit, I was reminded of how much I love sending postcards. Plus I’ve been told a number of times this month how important postcards can be in sharing ones work. So! That’s all the impetus I need to produce some postcards of my work and send them out into the world. If you would like to receive a postcard with my nature-themed images, or have a postcard sent to family, friends or colleagues, just send me a note with name and address to: photographybycynthia[at]gmail.com. There’s no charge and addresses will not be shared. A limited time offer through April 30, 2011.
To view my photos: http://photosbycynthia.smugmug.com/Nature
Read more about the postcard exhibit at BPL here.
Have a good day!