Knoxville Christian Arts Ministry (5 photos) by Dave Hileman

KnoxCAM is a group of musicians (instrument and vocal), dancers, actors and support crew who share the message of Christ through the music and original dramas written and arranged by the director, Jill Lagerberg. I was privileged to travel with the group to a small Kentucky town for a benefit concert to support a local food distribution program. I will share some photos next week of the whole event but for today, Jill, the Director of KnoxCAM, in the midst of the performance.

Jill, hard at work directing an exuberant section of the program. Her deep faith is the creative spark behind KnoxCAM. (And dare I say she is beautiful as well!)

The Soft Side of Spring by Dave Hileman

Wandering in the gardens of the University of Tennessee’s Botanical Gardens was a treat in the early spring. The weather was a bit nippy with a wind off the river but flowering trees and the first of the bright and colorful flowers were starting to emerge and a few ferns just showing the tips of the fiddleheads. I loved the color of these Lenten Roses in the overcast light of the morning.

Portrait Project #19 by Dave Hileman

You may well ask what happened to 15-18? Well, 15 is too young even through his father gave permission, I just don’t feel good about him, but he counts. If you recall the brief on the project, I suggested than that not all are going to be posted. The next three have their information on my desk and my desk if 350 miles away. So meet Hannah. She is a super cool young woman who was working at the UT Creamery. Yes, the UT Creamery is back. It began in 1915 but about the time I moved to Knoxville for school, it closed. Now reopened and better than ever. Had a scoop of peppermint with dark chocolate pieces. Whoa Nellie, good.

Now about Hannah, she is a vocal major at UT specializing in opera! So I will be going to see her with Jill in mid April. It will be my first opera and I already know a star. I took a photo sans hat but I thought she looked very cute with the hat, so it is posted. Best wishes to Hannah for a long, fruitful career and thanks for letting me take your portrait.

Art v Life by Dave Hileman

At the top of a small hill at the North Carolina Museum of Art is an outdoor art installation and mirroring that work from across the street is a crane working on a new building for the medical community. Art imitates Life or Life imitates Art, your choice. You may assign the bird to either.

And One More by Dave Hileman

These are vincas. Amazing that I knew that I know but someone told me what they are. Anyway these are at the front of my house along the walk and it makes a carpet of color for about three weeks.

More Flowers by Dave Hileman

This is from the North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh and the annual, Art in Bloom. This is a very popular show held each spring for the last 10 years and hard to get tickets if you are not prompt! Outside of the exhibit were a few arrangements - I took this one because I liked the colors and the design of the arrangement.

A Welcome to Spring by Dave Hileman

Such a pretty time of the year, the red and white trees rich in color, the flowers appearing overnight and adding beauty to the newly greener grass all signs of the warming of the year. Then the longer days begin to take hold and more birds are singing - just a lovely time to enjoy the season of renewal and beginnings. And a perfect reminder that Easter is just a week or so away, the ultimate renewal of life. I included two wildflowers I shot with my new lens last week. I may learn what they are and will add that if I do.

New Lens #2 by Dave Hileman

Man reading a book. He was across a large field from me, perhaps 100 yards. I waited until no one was visible on the trail in front of him to add to the solitary pursuit he is engaged in on the park bench. I cut him close to the edge to avoid the large and overflowing trash can to his left and if I moved to get a better space the tree bisected the man, so this seemed to be the best option.

New Lens Trial by Dave Hileman

So, I have a very nice new to me lens, technically it is a largesse lens:) I took it to the park on Sunday afternoon to try it out but the walk was cut short to get an email sent to a friend who needed some information. However, it was still evident that it is a very good lens and fills a need I have but was really unaware that the gap in my lens collection was as large as it was. No longer true. I shot only about 20 photos, but I will get some more tomorrow and Wednesday to round out what I was trying to do. One of the images, the bluebird here, was taken from 40 feet or so and the bird at least 20 feet high in the tree. And behind branches. I would normally have taken a second photo using manual focus to clear the tree branches but the bluebird had other ideas and flew up and away. But the point was still clear, this is a good medium distance bird lens and MUCH smaller and easier to carry than my other option. And super clear; the branches and detail of the tree - exceptional. And I decided to still show it here because the bird was not only nicely framed but inquisitive. So I will share a few more this week and then the lens will be just a regular part of the TLT arsenal. And a big thanks for the amazing gift.

Praise Team (four Photos) by Dave Hileman

I was at a church in rural Maryland last week and took some shots of the praise team preparing for the day. I shot photos to emphasize an individual while trying to keep the sense that they were not solo performers.

Another Look by Dave Hileman

One more set of photos from the slave quarters at the Kingsley Plantation. There are 24 or so of these arranged in a semicircle at the edge of the property - the swamp is right past the trees. Each place to live had one or two families or an extended family living in the small quarters. You will see a brick fireplace still remaining in one, for heat in the cooler weather and cooking year round.

Where Carousel Horses Retire by Dave Hileman

Of course, they go to Florida! Here we see a home for retired merry-go-round horses having a nice afternoon on the porch. I imagine tea has just been picked up. Fernandina Beach is a perfect place for them as there are nice beaches near by, good food everywhere and, of course, excellent weather to keep them looking sharp and tanned. These old horses recall their ancestors when carved horses were suspended from a pole and were used to train young warriors (carousel derives from the Turkish word for “little war”) as early as the 12th century in Turkey. This practice was refined into a crude earliy version of the carousels of the last century that dotted parks and small towns across America. Those carousels were replete with magnificently carved horses and other animals and fitted with calliope musical devices. Some restored carousels are still in use today, there is one in Raleigh that generations of children have enjoyed.

Trains in Town by Dave Hileman

An interesting aspect of walking around the town of Fernandina Beach on an island off Jacksonville, FL, is that the train here goes right through town and you can see them very close as they go quite slow. I know many towns have trains in the middle but this is on an island and is right in the midst of all the fine shops and restaurants. Just seems neat. The old station is now a very nice visitor’s center with a small parklike oasis right along the tracks.

Not What It Appears. by Dave Hileman

This lump of dirt is covering the structure of a Navajo hogan. On the back country tour of the Monument Valley we stopped at this hogan. A family chooses to live here to keep touch with the old ways. The kids must walk two miles to school and more if they miss the bus that brings them close to their home. Often they will leave two hours before school in order to be on time. The family was warm and welcoming and the hogan light and airy - not what I expected. Quite a treat.

Portrait Project #14 by Dave Hileman

This is Mark who is much more at home on the other side of the camera. He is an award winning, accomplished, professional photographer. Mark has done some amazing projects for National Geographic, BBC, PBS, dozens of companies and is also a film maker, producer and musician who writes scores for many of the shows you have seen on television. He was in Florida at the Silver Springs State Park to put up an exhibit of photographs from the park and I happened upon him as I was wandering around the park. We talked a bit about his work, his photographs, and I looked at one of his books that was on display. I asked him if I could take his photograph and why, he agreed. However he was a bit stoic, so I said something like, I was sorry this was such an ordeal for him and that elicited a smile. Then he said, when he realized what I did produced the smile, “This is not your first rodeo.” I took that from him as a compliment. You must visit Mark’s website at https://markemeryfilms.com

Stalking by Dave Hileman

You can see these White Egrets many places and often closer than this photo but I liked the context where the bird was stalking fish in the shallows of the Silver River in Florida. The huge trees and deep foliage make this bird seem more diminutive that it really is and somehow more striking as it wades in the water seeking prey.

Meet Horace by Dave Hileman

Or at least that is what one kayaker said his name was. Horace is a 30 pound plus snapping turtle that lives under the 2.0 mile dock on the Silver River at Silver Springs State Park. Drop a cracker and it is gone in an instant, dangle a toe, don’t know but not recommended.