Gallery Opening: Living Arts Oh Tulsa! Art Show

Last night's opening of the Oh Tulsa! art show at Living Arts of Tulsa drew a lively, eccentric crowd of artists and Tulsans enjoying First Friday downtown. The streets were crowded, the temperature outside was hellishly hot, and the gallery offered a cool place to meet friends, enjoy the creativity of Tulsa artists and have a drink from the cash bar. The crowd seemed to thoroughly enjoy themselves and to be in no hurry to leave for other events.





The show included all kinds of artwork, including paintings in oil, acrylic, ink and multimedia, sculpture, pottery, photography, jewelry, and some works that seemed to defy labels or merge several into one visual experience.  

One sculpture that somewhat defined the artwork offered in the show, "Realities & Perseverance" by Bailee Green, seemed to capture the struggles of an artist. The figure sits on discarded artwork as it finally finds its voice to create. I loved the realistic touches of discarded crumbles of waste paper covered with paint and the figure's paint stained hands. I assume the cracks in the body indicate that the artist feels somewhat broken. I am reminded of the well-known combination of quotes by Hemingway and Lenard Cohen, “We are all broken. That’s how the light gets in.”   



Some work really hits you with a bang! Because of size, subject or something else, these works could not go unnoticed. The giant portrait, entitled "Patty Ryan," of a monotone cowboy with one prosthetic leg on a bright yellow background is a perfect example. The piece is huge and actually uses two canvases.

Another large painting, "Sugar" by Faith Green, a closeup of a singer, radiates  energy.


You can't walk past "Fallen" by Colleen Stiles, which you see as you enter the venue from the parking lot, without stopping to to view it from all angles.



Another piece that tickles your curiosity is a large UV print of plexiglass titled "When I Make it Back to Bluebird Ct." by Justin Ortiz. I had to Google UV printing  to find out what it is and discovered that a large flatbed scanner lays ink on a variety of materials and then immediately develops it with UV light. Who knew? Now I do! The image is of a face.




And finally, who cannot be delighted by "Lobby Boy" by Faith Green, obviously taken from the Wes Anderson movie, " The Grand Budapest Hotel" ?


Some works capture  your attention and won't let go until you dig a little deeper, because they offer so much, usually layers of meaning. In "Sun Catcher" by Vanessa Pettit, the title character is drawn against a collage of small black and white prints. What story do they tell?


A lot is going on in the mixed media giclee print, "Greenwood."  The closer you look, the more you see that it tells a tragic Tulsa story.


I revisited one photograph a few times to admire and marvel at its complexity. Entitled, "Fever Dream 11," it consisted of two joined photographs by Destiny Green. Not only was I fascinated by how she mounted the photographs together but at how she managed to give the model so many arms. I couldn't help thinking of Kali, the Hindu Goddess of death and destruction. But that's just me, projecting.


I haven't even touched on some of my favorite pieces, but I have to add a plug for myself. I have three framed photographs of Tulsa in the show, a black and white of a chilly day in front of the Williams Center with foggy steam escaping from underground pipes, a color photo of the Circle theater, and a shot of the roofs of downtown Tulsa. All are framed in museum quality frames.




If you want to see all the things, there's a catalog, where you can see them all and which are still available, and which have sold.  Click here or use the QR code below. Click "catalogue" on the top menu. 

I enjoyed the show and loved looking at all the work and being inspired.  But I can't wait for the next Tulsa gallery opening. I'm hooked!


This show runs through August 18th.  It's open for viewing Tuesdays through Saturdays from 12:00 - 4:00 PM at Living Arts of Tulsa307 East Reconciliation Way, Tulsa. OK 74120.  918-585-1234


Life, the Universe and Everything

The world of art is a big one. Even when you narrow that world down to artworks that you can hang on your wall. Everyone who creates art has a whole  unique world inside themselves and life experiences that no one else has ever experienced . Even if they are only five years old. But especially if they have been repledged to live a long life. Like me.

My photograph in a show at Gilcrease.


When I was younger, especially in college, I never considered this question. I drew and painted from my own experiences. I painted float trips and fishing trips. I painted places I knew around Claremore and Oologah, where I grew up, and Philbrook where I took art classes as a child. Of course, I painted the obligatory still lives required in my college art classes and nude models too. I even tried my hand at abstracts.

But what about now? Luckily, I've been able to travel some, and luckily, I've taken pictures wherever I've traveled. I even got to live in Australia for two years. And I've learned to see with a photographer's eye, unique to myself, so I have a lifetime of photographic memories to explore in paint.

In the last decade, I've taken two magnicent car trips to the West Coast, taking different routes each time, through national parks and historic places. The American Southwest is mindblowing. So much is uninhabitable but starkly facinating.

I want to visit so many places I may never get the opportunity to see...The desserts of Iran, the coast of Crotia, and the vintage mansions of Romania, for instance. I'm not giving up those dreams, but I already have a thousand images from around the world and my own back yard to inspire my art.

I have been sharing my photography for some time now, selling my pictures internationally and showing in Philbrook, Gilcrease, and Living Arts of Tulsa. So now it's time to share the world I've seen and experienced in paint as well.  What do I have to say about life, the universe and everything? Maybe something that shares just a little of what life has meant to me in a way that connects with a few special people who see something that has meaning for them when they look at it.

I have always been an artist

 "You'd better do something with the artistic ability you've been given, or you'll lose it." 

I don't know how many people told me that when I was young, both friends my own age and adults. And I thought that, good gracious, I'd never let that happen! But adulthood came, with responsibilities and a child I raised myself for a while after divorcing his father. I had bills to pay and a career to nurture. I did actually use my artistic skills as an instructional designer and university professor, and eventually as a photographer, but not enough.


I even painted from time to time.... I wanted to do more, but then thought,  what would I do with more canvases? I didn't have room to hang them all, so they'd just be more to store. Silly me. I did cultivate my photographic skills and carved out a niche for myself with stock photography. But painting had to wait. I always knew I'd return to my first love, when I had time.

When the time came, I looked at the world of art with different, much older eyes. Instead of just digging in and painting for the sake of painting, I asked myself what I really wanted to accomplish. I guess I'd grown up.

I realized that I had never developed a style. Everything I drew or painted stood alone.  Who was the real me, as far as art was concerned? I'm still working on that one, but I have started collecting images of art I love and a pattern is emerging.

What did I want to paint? My years of photography and travel offer me lots of inspiration.  Over the years, I've developed a photographer's eye. I see pictures everywhere I look.  And I know I often see things in a way no one else does. If I don't capture it, no one will ever see that thing or place from my unique perspective. Ever. The same goes for art. I have a lot to say to the world. What the world looks like from my point of view.

So, I was ready to go! Paints, canvas, time!. But then I was confronted with the difficulty of portraying my vision for others to see. I am struggling with my paint. It used to do what I wanted. I often felt that someone else was even "channeling" through me, guiding my brush. But I think my muse may be coming back, slowly, as I work. But it's becoming fun, even consuming again.

I know I've lost some of my painting MOJO, but I think I can get it back. I even saw a video that proclaimed you don't have to be born an artist, that you can learn the skills, even if you don't have a talent for it. Mind
A painting from my early days

blowing 
concept!! I know I have talent. It's just rusty talent.  Actually, the more I experiment and delve into technique, the more I wonder what I was taught in all those high school and college art classes I took. I know I was assigned certain projects, such as still lives. I was given opportunities  like drawing from models. Did they try to teach me basic design theory, and  like many of my university students, I just didn't listen? I've learned more through the years, as I created diagrams and illustrations for manuals and video for training, and worked on the art of photography.

I am reading books,  watching videos and I am planning on signing up for an  art class at a local college in the fall. I have college certificates in technical and fine art, but I need to be around other artists and be inspired by them. 

And the tools and paints have changed !! I don't remember acrylics being so transparent. I don't remember having to deal with gloss and matte paints.   I'm ending using tools I never considered before to get what I want. So I've discovered mediums. If we had those in my youth, I never knew it. 

But I've jumped in with both feet.  I don't know where all this is taking me, but I love the battle. 

First World Traveler


I love to travel.  I am 66 years old, a photographer and a teacher, and I travel as often as I can.




As I am currently planning a trip to the country of Georgia (between Turkey and Russia) and to London, I have a lot of planning (and Amazon shopping) to do. For instance, what do I wear?  That question led me to posting a question about air conditioning in airports in a travel group I follow. When I lived in Australia, our local airport (Brisbane) had un-airconditioned parts. Since I have long layovers, I want to be comfortable, and Europe is having a heat wave right now.

The younger women on the group blasted me.  They thought I was really stupid to ask the question. Hey, I've only been in European airports in the winter before! And they smugly informed me that that was SUCH a first world question. 

The more I thought about it, the more I realized that I AM 1st world, and that I'm not going to apologize.  For instance, I broke my hip in Australia. If I had not had modern medicine, I wouldn't be here now. I have a stent in my heart. Same story.  Come to think about it, my son was born cesarean, and if not for modern medicine, neither of us would be here now.  Which I will remember to make clear to him the next time HE tells me my problems are "Soooo first world." Yes. He does that too.

Jon's 26. This trip is to visit the country that has hosted him for his two years in the Peace Corps. I want to share that experience with him as much as I can.  Then I'm bringing him back through London, which is special to me, and HOME!!


I'm really quite brave. My husband isn't even going because he's afraid of having to use a squatty potty. And I will, too, when I spend the night with Jon's host family.  But Jon assures me the Georgia is 2nd world, NOT 3rd world. OK. 

So....I am not staying in hostels like Jon and his friends do, but I am staying in AirBnbs, which work quite well for us. Places with two bedrooms are much cheaper than getting two hotel rooms. And I am packing a lot of stuff to keep me healthy and happy, although I am packing light. I'm going over with one suitcase and bring two back to help him move all his stuff.  

So my plans on this blog are not only to share my experiences on this trip, but to share if all the careful plans and interesting gadgets I purchase work for this old lady. 

Unfortunately my route is not as simple as the one pictured above. I am going through Orlando, Paris, and Athens to arrive in Tbilisi. Jon and I bargain shopped for flights over Skype from opposite sides of the world.  

So follow my travels and let's see how this first world mom makes out. Am I tough enough? I think so!!




How some of my stock Halloween images were used in 2018

I sell stock photography. Since I am a relative newcomer to the trade, I am constantly trying to learn more about who purchases my images and how they are used.

I was curious how some of my Halloween images were used this year, so I performed some reverse Google searches to find out. Actually, I don't sell that many Halloween images. Of course, Halloween is only really a "thing" in the United States, and I sell at least a third of my images outside of the U.S.  And I never find many of the images that I sell. They may end up in print or somewhere that Google can't find them easily or at all.  But I did find these three with a quick search.  

Halloween pictures are fun to capture and I will contine adding a few each year, I am sure.  I think the way these were used is interesting. It helps me understand the market a little.

This picture was resold as a wall mural. I'm glad they bought it, but I can't really see anyone actually using this, can you?


This picture was sold as editorial.  It's of kids trick or treating at my house last year, and was used in a news story in New Jersey. The boys in this group were adorable and happily posed for me.



This is really more of a fall themed picture, taken in my neighborhood.  It is legal to take photos from the road, and they are often accepted by some agencies, especially if they are not the house itself so much as some detail like seasonal decorations.  The company that used it is provides content for other publications to purchase, so it may appear in other newspapers or magazines.



I have taken more Halloween pictures that are not uploaded yet, and I plan to make a swing through the neighborhood when the sun comes out tomorrow before the decorations come down, but I am not in any hurry to upload them.

It's time to concentrate on the Christmas season!  I am already selling some Christmas content. This is my second Christmas season. I hope it's a good one.

If you are intersted in becoming involved in stock photography, this blog post provides some basic information on getting started:  http://susanvineyard.blogspot.com/2018/10/getting-started-in-stock-photography.html

Gifts for REAL MEN who like to Cook

It's time to start looking for Christmas presents if you don't want to be that gift giver who waits until the last mintue and pays WAY too much for junk that everyone else has picked over.   

YOU DON'T WANT TO BE THAT PERSON, DO YOU?

So my first task is to find a present for a casual single male friend who celebrates Christmas with us.  He is a super cool guy (Women, take note) who, among other things, loves to cook.  So I am headed to Amazon in search of the perfect gift.  Although I have known him for years, I have never been in his house, which makes this whole thing harder... He is a builder, and last year I bought him a cup with a tool for a handle.  So you can see, the gift does not have to be expensive, just thoughtful.


Here's my first idea:

I Don't Always Cook Oh Wait Yes I Do | Chef T-Shirt


Wow, this is almost perfect! This guy is a woodworker. Actually, he installs and sells doors and windows.  

Craftsmans Guild Waxed Canvas Heavy Duty Apron Cotton Straps Utility Tool BBQ Cooking Chefs Cooks Shop Woodworking for Men & Women  

Craftsmans Guild Waxed Canvas Heavy Duty Apron Cotton Straps Utility Tool BBQ Cooking Chefs Cooks Shop Woodworking for Men & Women


OK. This is even MORE perfect for a man who works with his hands and tools and loves to cook:

https://amzn.to/2RSiFxX
https://amzn.to/2RSiFxX 

Fred THE OBSESSIVE CHEF Bamboo Cutting Board, 9-inch by 12-inch


WARNING: FOUL LANGUAGE AHEAD
**********************************************************************


I wish I knew if he had any of these books.  I am guessing he might. If I knew he didn't, I'd get him one because I think he'd like them. I follow this author on FB and he has some pretty good recipes, and if you can overlook his language, he's an interesting author and chef.  I think my friend would enjoy him.



NOW THIS:   My friend is a man who has a drill.  No question about that. And he would probably appreciate this set of kitchen brushes that work with a drill. What do you think?


Kitchen Cleaning Brushes for Drill Kit with Long Reach Attachment. Three Piece Medium Power Scrub Brush Set for Sink, Counter Tops, Stove, Pots and Pans, Oven, and Flooring



And last, if we decide to spend a little more, I know this friend likes his steak, and what man would not LOVE this set of German steak knives in their own woodend holder?  


Cangshan V2 Series 59502 German Steel Forged 8-Piece Steak Knife Set with Solid Acacia Wood Block, 5-Inch! Blade


Now, I am going to let my husband pick one of these gifts for our friend and get it ordered and put away for Christmas.  One gift down and many to go, but I am NOT waiting until the last minute this year.

Yes, the links above will earn me a few cents if you use them to buy gifts. Thank you!  

Getting Started in Stock Photography


What is stock photography?

Stock photography is the business of selling photography to the public.  Most of it is made up of collections uploaded to agencies by free-lance photographers.  Most of the customers are business people looking for images for advertising, journalism, blogs, newsletters, websites, publications, products, etc.

Many designers have subscriptions with a stock agency and can download a certain number of images per month. Different licenses allow users to utilize the images in different ways. If you just want to put an image on a company website or a blog, the cost (and profit for the photographer) is low.  Other uses, such as reproductions on tee shirts, calendars, book covers, etc., will cost more, and, thus, pay more.

What can you expect?

If you are a photographer interested in selling stock photography, you should realize that it is not a get rich quick scheme.  Millions of pictures are uploaded for sale on the different agencies.  You will have a lot of competition, and you generally will not make much per image sold.  Some agencies sell images as low as in the single digits, but the average price is a little better than that.

You need to learn what sells and keep enlarging your portfolios to make any money at all.  After a year in the game, my average sale is about $.80 per image.  I occasionally make $50.00 or $20.00 or $2.78 on an image, but I also sell a lot of pictures for 33¢ or 36¢. It’s a numbers game.  Strive for quantity as well as quality.

Some photographers make thousands of dollars per month. I have not hit $500.00 per month yet.  Some do worse than that. For myself, I want to supplement my retirement money, and I am hoping to be making $1000 a month by the time I’ve been doing this for two years. It takes time for some pictures to get into collections and start selling. Currently, I have one picture that sells 4-5 times most days. I need more of those!

What do you need?

Some photographers achieve some measure of success with a good cell-phone camera. Some take pictures, process and upload from a phone.  But most successful photographers own a decent SLR camera. 

You may think you are a superior photographer now, but you will be challenged to up your game when you start submitting to some of the stock sites. Images will be reviewed, and often rejected for focus, exposure, grain and composition.  Sometimes they look pretty good in your camera window or as thumbnails, but when you blow them up to 100%, you see that they are not technically up to par.




In time, you will learn tricks of the trade to minimize these problems, but still you are dealing with not only AIs that cannot recognized the quality of a picture although it might not be technically perfect, and human reviewers with better eyes than you have and firm prejudices about technical and artistic quality.  You almost have to submit to multiple sites to keep your sanity and keep your anger and depression at bay over rejections some days, especially when you start out.

Some photographers only submit the best of the best and prevent a lot of rejections, but I have some questionable quality images that sell like hot cakes, so I get a little edgy with what I submit sometimes.  But I could never do this job without strong Photoshop skills.  Some contributors do not use Photoshop, but my style requires it. I never submit a photo that I have not viewed at 100% on a large, high quality monitor and have not checked carefully for quality using Photoshop’s tools.

You will also probably want to start out with a tripod, and a couple of lenses for your camera. You will add additional equipment as you learn and make a little money.
In Photoshop you can also remove logos and addresses and other things that are not allowed. Shoes can be a real pain, but you also have to look at logos on cars, and anything you photograph.  You get better at finding them and getting rid of them with practice. 
When you start photographing for stock, you’ll also realize how dirty everything is. When you blow up pictures of items, you will see dust and watermarks, etc. that you’d never notice with the naked eye.

What kind of thing sells? 

The kinds of picture that do not sell well include flowers and landscapes, unfortunately, although I sell some of each…. occasionally. I have found that any image that has something man-made sells better than those that don’t-even if that something is a road or a telephone pole, or a cleaning sponge or a pencil.  Remember that you are mostly selling to business people – designers and marketers, for instance. What kind of images will they be looking for?

Travel pictures sell well. Who uses them? Travel agents, and any business who cater to travel and tourism. My current best seller in an antiquity from Greece. Images should not be too complex or crowded. Keep them clean.  These are the best-selling images right now for “purse” on Shutterstock:


Overall, however, the best selling images have people in them.  If I had started this twenty years ago, with my cute little son and younger (at that time) friends who would have modeled for me, I would have done quite well. I still have some friends who are willing to pose for me, and I am very thankful for that. 


You will need signed releases from them.  Any recognizable person in an image must be released for commercial images. Finding people who will sign those out of friendship or just for fun is a skill that comes in handy.   If you’re making thousands a month, you can afford to even pay them. I am not there yet.  


An option for images containing un-released people or property is to sell them as editorial images. Only commercial images can be used to advertise or sell an item, but for news stories, blogs, and any non-advertising purposes, editorial images can be used.  Commercial images with no people or released people can be used in more instances, but some of my best-selling images are editorial. However, every agency approaches editorial differently.

These agencies also accept videos and vectors and I have sold a few of both of these and need to spend more time creating more.

How do you get started?

Most agencies give you an opportunity to submit a number of images for review, and if you pass the review, you can become a contributor. Then you start building your portfolio. When you reach a certain level of sales, they pay you. I choose to be paid through PayPal, but they have other options too.

Here are some of the more popular stock sites:

Shutterstock: Most people start out on Shutterstock. It isn’t the easiest or the hardest to pass reviews. Right now, it is where I make the most money, because of how many I sell there. Some other agencies average higher profits per image. Anyone using Microsoft products can easily access Shutterstock images directly from PowerPoint, for example, if they have the add-in.
You can sign up to be a Shutterstock contributor here:  https://submit.shutterstock.com/?ref=3157781


Adobe: This agency is closing in fast on my profits from Shutterstock. Their reviewers are much meaner and they do not take editorial images, and as a result, I have fewer than half the images in my Adobe portfolio as I do in Shutterstock, but the average price is better.  Anyone who uses Adobe products, has direct access to their stock photography.  They can choose an image and drop it into a webpage to see how it looks, for instance, before they decide to buy it.
You can sign up on Adobe by clicking this link.  Click the “Sell” link in the upper right-hand corner of the screen. If you are new to Adobe, in the middle of the screen, click the blue button that reads “Create an Adobe ID”.  If you are already an Adobe subscriber, click the button “Continue with my Adobe ID, ” where you will be prompted to log in with your Adobe user ID and Password. 

Dreamstime:  This agency is pretty easy with reviews. They also accept your work really quickly. They do accept editorial. They pay fairly well per image, but they don’t sell a lot.  Last month, they were great, but since the first of Oct, they have just quit selling. It’s quite easy to submit there, and it’s almost worth it to me to know images I think are good but that are rejected by Shutterstock and/or Adobe, have a chance to sell somewhere. It keeps my blood pressure down.  But I have received my first payout from them.


Here’s where you sign up for Dreamstime:  https://www.dreamstime.com/sellimages#res20282806


Istock:  This agency used to be the biggest and the best.  Now some images and even videos sometimes sell for as low as 3¢.  Quite a few people have just quit contributing to them, but their AVERAGE payout per image is quite a bit higher than Shutterstock, and last month, I actually made more on Istock than on Shutterstock or Adobe, so I keep submitting. They do take editorial, but are very picky and strange about it.  Their review process on commerical photography isn’t as picky as some.


These are my four main agencies, although I am beginning to play around with a few more.
Becoming a stock photographer is a journey and a challenge. It’s a lifestyle. There’s always more to learn, and plenty to do! But knowing other people are valuing your photography enough to pay for it is a reward in itself. If you decide to pursue this endeavor, this article just outlines the first steps.  But it is a start. Welcome aboard!



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