Showing posts with label Cafe Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cafe Art. Show all posts

Sunday, August 1, 2021

Dark or Light?

 Most of the time I know pretty well where I want to go with my café art, but occasionally I am at loggerheads with myself. 

That was the case when working on a photoodle from a photo of Jud Shumway performing with his Sawgrass Blues Band at Night Music at Town Center, Peachtree Corners, on July 10, 2021. 

I just couldn't make up my mind whether to go dark or light. There are twenty versions in my folder of this photo manipulation session. I have worked on it, off and on, for several weeks. 

Here are the two finalists, you can decide for yourself which one you like. 




.:. © 2021 Ludwig Keck

Friday, January 27, 2017

Showcasing Fine Photo-Paintings

FAA Cafe Art Showcase Features

One of my joys is to host the “Cafe Art” group at Fine Art America. Over three hundred artists from around the world contribute delightful photo-paintings, photo-manipulations, and photo-abstractions to this group. Several times each month a number of submitted pieces are featured on the group home page and I select one, rarely two or three, to be “showcased” as particularly outstanding examples our our genre of work.

Today three particularly impressive street scenes are my choice to be so offered to visitors to the group site. Below are my picks. Each image links to the artist’s catalog page for the work at Fine Art America.

Tourists - Paris - Place Du Tertre by Nikolyn McDonald


Impressions Of Venice by Brian Tarr


1940s Times Square Rain by Susan Maxwell Schmidt

This wonderful tour of Paris, Venice, and New York should whet your appetite for more of the works of our fine artists in the Cafe Art group. Do visit the Cafe Art Group Home page.


.:.

© 2017 Ludwig Keck

Sunday, July 10, 2016

Cafe Art and Photopainting

As far back as I can remember I have always been fond of dabbling, drawing, painting, and doodling. Photography has also been my hobby. When the technology became available to combine both, of course, I could not resist. What resulted from my early efforts I could hardly call art. It didn’t seem that any of it would be accepted by any self-respecting gallery. Maybe my favorite café might give me a couple of square feet of wall space. They didn’t, but I nevertheless called my creations “café art”.

Evening on the Marsh

To show my work I started the Café Ludwig sites and blogs. Actually there were, and still are, some people who cheered me on. There were even other artists who do similar work, hundreds, maybe thousands of them. Many of those fellow artists could be found online. To provide “gathering spots”, I started groups and communities; all called “Café Art”. You can find us on Facebook, Google+, and especially at Fine Art America.

When I coined the term "café art" for my own work I applied it to manipulated photos, anything that started out as a photo but is visibly no longer a "straight" photograph. In my own work that ranges from abstractions that have no hint of origin to images that are partially photographs with alteration by texturing, vignetting, softening and similar techniques.

Mind you, some of my "café art" got rejected by me at my own Fine Art America Café Art group for not meeting my own rules.

Hawk

Well, I could not sell anybody else on using the term "café art" to no one's surprise, and right from the beginning I referred to the work shown in the Café Art group as "photo-painting". That is a hijacked term as it originally, more than a century ago, meant a painting produced on a photo as a substrate and outline and painted over. In modern terms the "painting over" is done with digital techniques. Such techniques include "filters" and tools like Topaz Simplify, Topaz Impression, Dynamic Auto-Painter, FotoSketcher, and many other such utilities.

"Straight photographs" have all had a variety of enhancements applied. Some right inside a camera, many in "post-processing". There is a fine line between still being recognized as a photograph and something more artistic.

Reed Grass

Not wanting to set myself up as the prime authority on the matter I decided to let my artist colleagues make their own distinction. Members of my groups decide what they want to share in my groups. There is some amazing creativity on display there.

At Fine Art America art is for sale. The organization does a magnificent job of producing art products of outstanding technical quality, from museum-quality, framed and glazed, archival reproductions to shower curtains. Artists are understandable more fussy when joining a group. There have to be narrow definitions to distinguish the many groups from each other. My FAA Café Art group is for “photopaintings”.

Holiday Market

Label it "photopainting" and it is, subject to some other restrictions, acceptable at my Café Art group. Don't label it "photopainting" and by definition of the artists, it isn't, and it won’t be accepted. It seemed so clear and straight forward. I must have had the mentality of a four-year old.

Of course, this is controversial. Some artists do magnificent photo manipulations but refuse to call them “photopainting”. We have a lively discussion on the topic going on. So, yes, we see the world our own way - after all, we are artists. It is expected of us that we see what others don't, that we imagine what others can't.

Dreaming Ferns

I have illustrated this article with examples of my own café art photopaintings. These are available for purchase at Pixels. Click on them to take a look. For remarkable work by other artists visit the Café Art groups at Fine Art America, Google+, and Facebook.

.:.

© 2016 Ludwig Keck

Monday, May 16, 2016

Thistles

The dictionary says, “prickly, composite plants having showy, purple flowers”. They are a favorite target for my camera, yet they rarely make it into my blogs. I will set that right with a few recent ant some “ancient” photos. Just three weeks ago thistles were blooming by my favorite pond.

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Thistle Blossom

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Now it is time for thistle seeds. Instead of bees and butterflies, the thistles are now visited by finches and other small birds.

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One of my first “trademark” images for Café Ludwig was a stylized take of a butterfly on a thistle.

Butterfly

Well, let’s see where the wind will take us.

.:.

© 2016 Ludwig Keck

Saturday, May 23, 2015

Bouquet

A Bouquet from the Garden

In this case the garden is The State Botanical Garden of Georgia, located in Athens, Georgia. It provides a conservatory and over 300 acres of gardens and natural areas with miles of trails.

State Botanical Garden of Georgia

The bouquet includes “café art” renderings and photographs. In fact the images range across the “divide”. All are painstakingly processed to bring out what I thought I want to show. In some cases that was done by using a “painterly” approach. For some others I wanted to retain photo-realism yet show the subject impressively. Some of the images are really nearly photo-realistic café art, maybe you will recognize one or two.

Rose

Heritage Rose

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As a change of pace, the images here link to pictures in my album “Bouquet from the Garden” on my Ludwig.Photos site. This site has undergone major renovations recently. Indeed, it is still being tweaked. This is the first time that I use any links to it. Some of these might not quite work as expected.

Rose

Water Lily

Poppy

Poppy

You may wish to try the slide show feature in the album. Since this is a first effort, your comments and suggestions are most cordially solicited. Please avail yourself of the comment feature below.

State Botanical Garden of Georgia

.:.

© 2015 Ludwig Keck

Sunday, March 29, 2015

Painterly Transforms

Painting in the garden was totally out of the question, the sudden cold spell and the cutting March winds made being outside quite intolerable. My artist friends had retreated into the studio and were milling about looking glum. This was my day to host the group. There was Gustav, Joaquin, Vincent, Paul, Claude, Emil, well the whole gang was here with nothing to paint. So I tacked up a recent photo as inspiration and broke open the case of cheap French wine. Things got going and enthusiasm reigned until I rang the dinner bell. They all came rushing to partake in my culinary creations. Artist!! Always hungry!

This is what was left on the easels:

What?!  You want the sober version of this story? You got all the way down here only to doubt …. oh, alright.

I was testing Dynamic Auto-Painter PRO 4. This program for transforming photos into painterly images has a huge number, ok, 48, presets that emulate the style of different painters, even individual paintings. There are seemingly an endless number of adjustments and options so you can individualize the effect and style considerably. Even during the running of the automated process intervention is possible. Quite a powerful tool. It runs moderately fast. Output size can be controlled and there are other options. You can learn more on the Media Chance site.

.:.

© 2015 Ludwig Keck