Author Archives: Dan Sisken

January Speaker: Bob Catlett

This season, we’ll be trying some new approaches to Speaker’s Night. Of course we’ll still have our roster of pros who address various kinds of photography (e.g., food, black & white, nature, etc.). But we start the club year with a special treat: a look at the work of SSCC’s Bob Catlett, in his own words. He’ll not only show us examples of his work, but he’ll also explain his techniques for creating such images. Bob has been a member of SSCC since 1982, just about longer than any other current member. And over these 30+ years, Bob has grown to be one of the finest of the club’s photographers.

Bob CatlettWhen he was still in high school, Bob discovered photography and bought a contact printer for 620 film. That was the beginning. His first 35mm camera was a Vivitar; his next was a Pentax Spotmatic. Today, Bob shoots Nikon and has enough bodies, lenses, filters, lighting equipment, and accessories – not to mention computers and back-up storage devices – to fill a couple of large closets.

For formal training, Bob took some photography classes at Montgomery College after finishing his college studies in criminal law at Howard University and American University. But he probably learned just as much about photography from examining the landscapes of Ansel Adams, the vegetable images of Edward Weston, and the flowers of Robert Mapplethorpe.

What are Bob’s favorite subjects? From what we’ve seen of his work in club competitions, his first love is nature – anything from wide open expanses of landscapes to jewel-like detail of macro shots of flowers. He especially enjoys the constant changes in nature subjects, seasonal changes and changes in the light and shadows depending on the time of day. But Bob is almost as happy in a studio environment and has spent a lot of time experimenting with figure studies. As outgoing as Bob is, it’s no surprise that he also enjoys photographing people, capturing just the right expression that reveals a person’s essence.

Along with Bob’s career, first with the Metropolitan Police Force and then the Federal Reserve Bank, he found time to serve SSCC. He was treasurer for eight years, vice-president for two years, and field trip chairman for well over 10 years. Now, Bob serves the club as a director and uses his long experience with SSCC to advise the officers and committee chairmen of our board.

One of Bob Catlett’s golden characteristics is his unfailing generosity with information and willingness to help other photographers, no matter what their level. Thank you, Bob!

Silver Spring Camera Club has joined Meetup

Silver Spring Camera Club has joined the Meetup social media platform!  Meetup is an online social media tool that fosters genuine connections with Meetup members while enhancing the visibility of SSCC in the community.  We joined Meetup to help advertise the many exciting activities we offer and encourage more members to join the club and participate. More sharing of knowledge and experiences will help everyone grow as photographers and make membership in the Silver Spring Camera Club more worthwhile than ever before.

sscc-meetupMeetup is not just a social media platform similar to Facebook or Twitter.  Meetup really fosters face to face meetings rather than exclusively online “friends” and “followers”.  Meetup exists in 180 countries, has almost 22.5 million members among 209,000 Meetup groups, with about 4,000 of those groups about photography.

Current members of the Club are encouraged to join the Meetup group.

Go to: http://www.meetup.com/Silver-Spring-Camera-Club/

The advantages of joining the Meetup group are reminder emails about meetings, finding and staying in contact with other members, a place to post and enjoy looking at others photos from field trips and finally, the possibility of finding other Meetup groups that may interest you with different topics than photography. Again, go to http://www.meetup.com/Silver-Spring-Camera-Club/ take a look around and join the fun.

 

May 14: Emily Reid Campbell Judges Abstract Competition

For the culmination of our exploration of abstracts this season, we celebrate with this month’s competition on abstracts. By now, many SSCC members are old hands with this topic. We’ve created abstracts for our group exhibit, and many of us have been juried in – again – to Joe Miller’s annual abstracts exhibit.

Emily Reid CampbellFinding a judge for this topic was a bit tricky. We wanted someone with a special interest in abstracts but someone with a new perspective to which we haven’t been exposed before. Emily Reid Campbell is just that person.

Also known as “dcemmy,” Emily is an abstract, architectural, conceptual, and experimental landscape photographer and web designer. She’s a member of InstantDC, ExposedDC staff, AMPt, and several other photography, web design, and digital media organizations. Her work has been featured in local galleries and exhibits, as well as on many national and international photography websites.

For Emily, the primary focus is on architecture, in both “standard building” and abstract forms, and though she enjoys branching out into other photography styles and genres, this is her true passion. She is fascinated by lines, patterns, and angles – and she loves finding new ways to use these to create unique art forms and alternative perspectives.

Emily lives in Washington, DC with her husband James and son Thomas. She and her husband are co-owners of Bright Zebra Media, a web design firm catering to a diverse array of small business clients.

To see some striking examples of Emily’s work, visit her web site: www.dcemmy.com.

Guest Speaker: Lew Lorton on Travel and Street Photography (May 7)

For our last speaker’s night of this season, we present the iconoclastic Lew Lorton, who actually has a temperament like a lot of us. In his professional background, Lew had a long and checkered career as an Army officer, VP of a statistical consulting company, CIO of a health care research organization, Executive Director of a technology consortium, and finally the founder of a small Internet company.

lewlortonHe has been married for a very long time and has five grown children, including two sons named Michael. Lew says that realizing at last that he was wasting a great deal of time working, he retired and got pretty serious about photography. (Sounds like many of us!) Since mountains, trees, and buildings don’t move very much and most wildlife moves too quickly to catch, he didn’t see either of those kinds of photography as much of a fit with his temperament. So…he began to concentrate on shooting pictures of people. He used to shoot with full frame Nikons but has switched to mirrorless cameras – Sony A7 II and Olympus OM-D E-M5. He loves prints more than screen images.

A return trip to Vietnam aroused Lew’s love of South East Asia and its various peoples, and he has been back there several times – three times to Myanmar, three times to Vietnam, twice to Laos, and once to Cambodia. Each of these trips started and ended with some time in Thailand. His most recent trip was in February, 2015 when he traveled through the north of Thailand and over the border into Laos up near China, all by bus and boat. Lew has never gone on a tour and prefers to travel ad hoc with only a faint schedule and a plane reservation home. His love of street photography influences the photos he takes while traveling, and in Lew’s May presentation, he’ll talk about how that all fits together.

Lew’s web site and blog are www.lewlortonphoto.com