Monday, October 30, 2006

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Installation

My wife finally was able to install an amazing art piece commissioned by a middle school. The principal found Casey at one of our art shows, called her, and asked Casey to come up with something for the school's main office.
It's an amazingly vibrant piece of art. One that will make students smile, inspire them, and make the school a better place to be. Casey created something that will be there for years, and thousands of students will have the opportunity to view it.
I can only imagine Casey as she might have been when she was younger, viewing this same piece of art. She would have smiled, reading the lines and absorbing the colors, thinking to herself "I can do that." She can... and once again I'm stunned to be lucky enough to call myself her husband.




Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Superkitties

We always knew there was something special about our kitties, and last night they revealed their true identities to us! Here they are, watching out for crime in the neighborhood. Casey and I feel safer already!

Friday, October 20, 2006

The Mets

The Mets lost last night, and anytime a team from New York or New Jersey loses, I think of my wife's family - and specifically Ira, whom I call "Pops." He's a sports nut - so much so that when we visited a few months ago, he was watching a replay of the Jets game he had already seen. A pre-season Jets game.

But, unlike some people I know, there's a lot more to him than sports. He's politically adept, can talk to anyone, at any time, about anything, and he's one of the nicest and most sincere people I've ever met. He tears up watching romantic movies and sometimes says the most outrageous things possible. He's his own guy, and although not everyone around him agrees with him, they all can't help but love him.

We cooked him spaghetti the other night, and here he is, telling us a story at the dinner table.

Simply put, he's a special guy, and 'aint nobody better.

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Friday, October 13, 2006

Grey

Another cup of coffee...

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Zach

This is Zach at his first art show in someone's back yard. His photography looked amazing - filled with color, lines, shapes, early morning mists, found beauty, and a general sense of creativity and talent. He still doesn't know what he wants to do with photography, whether it be art shows, band photography, portraits, weddings... but he has the talent to do what he wants. It's a good place to be, though, with all the possibilities open before you.

He says he owes a lot of it to me, but this kind of stuff has to come from inside. Sometimes we just have people to show us the way and light a path we hadn't seen before. Photography isn't something everyone can do, no matter what anyone says. Everyone can snap a picture, but can everyone take a photograph?

Zach can take photographs, and he gets better every time I see his stuff.

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

A leaf

My wife made me coffee this morning, so I created a new post! This one is a "forgotten" photo from our New Jersey trip. I just recently looked through the folder on my computer and this photo suddenly stood out for me.

Monday, October 09, 2006

Posting

My wife likes when I post new blogs. She said to me "why don't you just post photos - you don't have to write anything!" SO... here is a photo. I love you, Casey!


Sunday, October 08, 2006

The Artist

























My wife is an artist. It's a statement of fact - not opinion. Sometimes she doubts herself - sometimes she gets down on herself, and sometimes she doesn't know what to make of what it is she does.

I think all artists get that sometimes, simply because being an "artist" is so hard to define.

To me, an artist is someone who passionately faces the world every day, living in the good and the bad that daily life has to offer, and then makes art that describes how that person feels about life.

Casey's art is beautiful - it's positive - it's optimistic. It gathers all the bad we sometimes get and pushes it to the side, focusing on the "good stuff" and making sure we remember what's important. The colors she uses are bright and beautiful - awakening us to the amazing colors present in a sunset - in a tree at fall - in the glow that surrounds a couple in love. Her colors are not artificial -they are vibrant and alive.

The words she uses are inspirational. She reminds us of the power and the capability within each of us. She herself is a living example of what can be done - of talent and emotion coming alive.

Her message is one of hope, of love, of beauty - simply because she is herself all of these things and so much more.

I am sometimes drawn to deep thought - brooding thoughts on what the future might hold. But Casey's art brings me back home, makes me pause, and reminds me that even in the dark, there is beauty all around us... if only we look deep enough.

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Finally


















I finally managed to get out and take some photos of a 9/11 memorial in town. Even though it's after midnight and I have school tomorrow, the photos are worth it. I have to get out and do the night shot thing more.

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

Try the Impossible

There is power in words and in the idealism that comes from them.

A phrase "try the impossible" or "do the impossible" comes off to some of my students as nothing but empty words from another teacher's mouth. Since birth they are inundated with these types of phrases. They are told they can be President. They are told they can be rich, powerful, and can have things most of us can only dream about. If only you try. If only you work hard enough. The American Dream. As they become teenagers they begin to see the truth in the world- that these words are mostly empty promises. They begin to see through a sub-standard education system that receives pennies compared to a military budget.

But I believe in the dream. Not in the "American Dream" - but in a dream of changing the world, one person at a time. See - I don't believe that everyone can be rich. The classic "American Dream" is simply not real. But that's OK. I don't believe that everyone can have the stuff you see on MTV Cribs or the Lives of the Rich and Famous.

I believe in something different.

It seems to me that we can change the world around us by bettering ourselves - by believing in ourselves and what we believe even if those notions are unpopular - and by expressing those beliefs to others and trying to do what's right.

I believe in my students. They don't have much money. They don't, in all honesty, have much power in conventional terms. Yet they do have the ability to make a difference.

If you look at American history, the most powerful movements haven't been created by politicians or the military. Even with billions of dollars - money to throw out windows - they have not been the driving force. Common people - like you and I - are the ones who have changed the world.

I think of the civil rights movements, and the freedoms we have today. The government didn't just freely give us these rights. People marched - tens of thousands - hundreds of thousands - to change the world around them. Each one of those people that marched - even if only once - made a difference by being one cog in those important movements.

I think of, outside of stricly American history, of the man who stood up to a row of tanks in China. No one knows his name, he's now known as "The Unkown Rebel." Yet he continues to inspire people to face seemingly impossible odds.

He stood up to tons of rolling steel and a government without mercy. He tried the impossible. He lived. He changed the world.

I hope that some of my student's do indeed try the impossible. One of my former students, currently becoming an architect, can change things. She can tell her story to others, and because of her success, she can inspire change that will challenge the course of history.

Some of my current students, some rebels, some outcasts, some troublemakers - they can make a difference. I wouldn't teach if I didn't believe it, and after five years of the profession, I believe it more every day.

I will fight for this generation. Even as the media portray them to be stupid, to be ignorant, to be careless and crass. I'll fight for them because I see something most people don't - the power in these young people to make a difference. To do something wonderful.

To try the impossible.

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Family in KC

My wife and I went to Kansas City this last weekend to visit family - my cousin Becky and her husband, Ryan. Trying desperately to get away, on the left, is Beavis the cat, and, in the middle, Porter the dog. It was a wonderful weekend filled with fun, laughs, food, and just pure happiness. It's good to be with family, and Becky and Ryan are two of the most genuinely happy people I know. Their home is filled with warmth and love, and my wife and I had a spectacular time.























Friday, August 04, 2006

New Shots

Next weekend is "Art In Bloom" at the Omaha Botanical Gardens. These are all-new prints I've printed for the show, and I feel lucky to have gotten them. All were made in one day in New Jersey - at a location my wife and I found by accident. They are some of the best I've done in a while, and I love the mystical feel to them.





Thursday, July 27, 2006

A new adventure
























Every year is an adventure when you're a high school teacher. This will be year number five, and I feel like I'm just getting started. Every year is so different - so exhilarating and exciting - that I sometimes feel bad for almost everyone I know - because they hate their jobs. I love mine...

My new students come into my classroom on that first day as tentative, unsure-of-what-this-class-will-bring teenagers. Most of them have vastly different backgrounds than I do. I was a lucky kid - two incredible parents, a solid household (I had the same phone number ever since I was born), never went hungry or didn't have presents under the tree at Christmas.

It's a different story for many of the students in my classes. I've had students who have never known their parents - only the cold-hearted, unfair foster care system. I've had students who can't do anything before or after school because they are literally taking care of their brothers and sisters at home - cooking, cleaning, working. I've had students crying in my office, breaking down in front of me, because their mother just doesn't care - about anything except drugs.

Yet I'll never stop being inspired by them. For every student who chooses to do drugs, drop out, choose violence - there are others who take much more difficult paths - ones where they make a better life for themselves. Every year there are students who will be the first to graduate from high school in their family. The first to go to college, and imagine a better life for themselves.

I can't imagine what their lives are like once they are outside the safe confines of my classroom - but I do know that they sometimes make choices I could never imagine facing. It's my job to be there - to teach them, to challenge them, to make them better people in a democratic society. Mostly, though, it's my job to help them find their way.

They've helped me find mine.

Saturday, July 22, 2006

Monday, July 17, 2006

History

There is history here in Nebraska, and I've photographed some of it across the state - old barns, abandoned houses, ways of living in the past. Yet we don't hold a candle to New Jersey. Now - there, they have history. American history, at least. While we wanted to get into the big city of New York, we settled for the countryside of New Jersey, and we found some amazing things. Pictured here is an old revolutionary-era ironworks site.















































Friday, July 07, 2006

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Eyes

There is something special in the eyes of a lab. Maybe it's because my lab, Alabama, was the sweetest, most loving animal I've ever known. This lab, Sophia, has those same eyes, and it brings me back a few years, remembering just how much I miss, not Alabama's eyes, but the way she looked at me with them.