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Claudia Retter

Street Address
Columbus, OH
(614) 937-5163

Claudia Retter

  • Photography
  • Flying Adventure Book
  • Dear Pippin
  • About/Contact
  • Blog

A Homemade Artist Residency

September 5, 2016 Claudia Retter
Working on the book.

This spring I applied to a residency program at an art center in Florida. As I should have suspected, the universe had other plans for me.  Yes, I was disappointed to get that “We’re sorry, but thank you for applying...” letter, but after grumbling about it for a couple of days, I realized it was ridiculous to wait for an artist residency to get to work.  As it is, my Flying Adventures book has been on a long and rough road to get back onto my studio table, and putting it off until November — even for a residency — was still just putting it off.  Sometimes it’s easy to know when you’re stalling.  When I start vacuuming and doing the dishes instead of working in the studio, I know something’s up.  This was harder to figure out though.  I liked the idea of spending a chunk of time with other artists who are also working on projects. I liked the idea of getting some feedback and guidance on the structure of the story.  I also liked the idea of being accepted into my first residency.  BUT I realized, finally, that all of that wasn’t as important as just getting to work.

I did, however, want to leave my own space and daily life to work elsewhere.  Sometimes that makes a huge difference in how you approach and focus on a project.  Enter Lynn, my college roommate-turned-dear-friend many years ago.  A writer and educator with plenty of creative projects on her own plate, she told me to come visit, and off I went to upstate-ish New York via this lovely view of the city.

New York

Lynn’s house has always made me happy.

Windowsill flowers
Hutch and chair
Flowers

Even here though, I stalled. I had emails to answer and phone calls to make and shouldn’t I be working on my next blog post and balancing my checkbook, etc, etc.  Finally I asked Lynn if I could borrow the dining room table and then wound up staring at my pages of words and thumbnails for an hour:  Is the story too long?  What should I cut out?  I have too many images.  How long does it take to read it out loud?   Do I stay true to the facts of the story or to the spirit of the story?  Will scans of pages look right on a slideshow screen for the reading or should I show single images?  Will I go broke buying frames for all the pages when I make the exhibit for wall spaces? Do I edit the story with the book in mind or the reading?   Is Lynn’s table big enough?

About to cut up the pages...

One step at a time.  I knew the first thing I had to do was cut up those papers, so I started there.  No thinking involved.  Soon enough, at least one of my questions was answered: yes, it did fit on Lynn’s table.

Text on the table.

Images were next, and this is where I got stumped.  Do I lay it out as it looked in the original book, then rearrange?  Or do I just start from scratch?

Thumbnails

I decided to group images with relevant text, regardless of where they’d gone in the first edition.  I figured I’d put down what I knew for sure and hoped that the rest would fit itself together later.
 
From there I methodically worked on scenes. I lost track of time.  When I moved my first photo from the wrong place to the right place I got goosebumps!  Putting the layout together was like working on a puzzle. I scribbled notes in the margins if there was something I needed to think about: Fix wording… Get a photo of… Cut this part…? Switch this with…

Editing.

In between time at the table, Lynn and I took a field trip to hear her friend sing with a jazz trio (which put the singing bee back in my bonnet — although that’s another post), and spent an afternoon at the Mohonk Mountain House in New Paltz, where I wandered over fairy bridges and had tea on the giant porch.  The whole place felt like Hogwarts but in upstate New York.

Monhonk Mountain House
Mohonk Mountain House

While exploring the hotel, I passed the “Naturalist’s Office."  People are invited to leave notes on the bulletin board on the door if he’s not in. My favorite: “We had a small snake visit our room…”

Mohonk Mountain House

We also took a field trip to the city.  Except for the night sky itself, is there anything as magical as Grand Central's ceiling of stars? 

Grand Central Terminal
Grand Central Terminal
Empire State Building

It was an amazing week. (I even met up with a relative I didn’t know I had!) When all was said and done, I had my layout finished, a shortlist of things that still need attention, and I even started working on the slideshow format for my reading. 

To put icing on the cake — how weird is this?! —  after I finally cleared the table and packed up all my little strips of paper and tiny photos, I checked my email to find a note from a photo-friend/art professor at Snow College in Utah, wanting to add me to their schedule of visiting artists in the fall.  It will be the debut of the book’s “illustrated reading” AND my first paid gig — Yes!!  *October 27... come if you can*

Second draft.

As I left New York for crazy gorgeous skies, I felt so thankful.  I thought about how different I felt from the week before when I arrived.  I am excited again, hopeful, purpose-full, and clear about what the next steps are to get this project out to the world.  Stay tuned… 

Sunset 

Many, many thanks to the Ohio Arts Council and the Greater Columbus Arts Council for funding that is helping to facilitate further work on this project.  Find out more about the book, view the original edition, and purchase one of the last remaining copies of the mini paperback version HERE.

In In the Studio Tags Flying Adventures book
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Say Hello More Often

July 5, 2016 Claudia Retter
Matt and Tim, two grooms

I made a New Year's resolution to say yes to more things, to step out of my comfort zone a little more often. If I'm hesitant about doing something (and it’s not for a really good reason), I now make an effort to do it anyway. One of the things it's helping me get over is my shyness about introducing myself to strangers.  I know, I know... me, an introvert? I'm so outgoing, yes, but when it comes down to it, I'd rather wait for someone to start a conversation with me instead of the other way around.  (It's funny though, because when I was little, my older sister said she’d take me for walks and all I did was say hello to strangers.)  Anyway...

My brother and his wife and I were going to have dinner at our favorite Melbourne FL restaurant.  Amici's opened their new Chef's Table and we love sitting at the open kitchen bar watching Dave, Paul, and Katie cook, and chit-chatting with everyone who's become more like family than restaurant staff.  The place was packed but they’d saved three seats for us.  Normally I would have picked the middle one, but I made myself choose the one next to a stranger.  I introduced myself, and soon we were talking up a storm.  It turned out that my new dinner friend Matt and his partner Tim were getting married, and I said "Hey lemme know if you need a photographer..." I didn't even have a business card to hand out--Yargh, I need to fix that!--but it didn't matter. Matt looked at Tim and said, “Wouldn’t she be so fun?” So Tim gave me their details and the rest got worked out from there.  

Matt and Tim, two grooms

Their wedding was lovely. Beachside, with great people (including a rowdy-fun group of Matt's flight attendant friends), a chocolate fountain (who doesn't love that?) and delicious red velvet thank you cupcakes made by Maria of the Amici's Bakery (of course!). 

Red velvet cupcakes

What I find so ironic about this post is that I was writing the draft on the plane ride back to Ohio, not really paying any attention to my seat mate, an elderly gentleman who was penciling notes into a music score. When we landed I finally said hello and asked him about it.  Turns out he used to be a conductor in New York, is now "retired" (yet playing drums in three different bands) and was visiting his daughter in Columbus.  We talked about music and art in a fast 10 minutes while people were deplaning... about learning new things throughout your entire life, being curious, keeping up your interests. What an amazing, wonderful man! I only wish I'd said hello when we first boarded, but that's ok, I got his email address and hope that we'll stay in touch. 

My point?  Say hello! Better yet, say hello and ask a few questions. You never know what interesting people you'll meet, where life could take you, or even whose day you might be changing by simply starting a conversation.

Who will you say hello to today?

In In the Studio, Goings-on Tags wedding photography
2 Comments

Congratulations, Phil & Anthony!

October 18, 2015 Claudia Retter

It was an honor and privilege to photograph the very tiny wedding of my dear friends, Phil and Anthony.  Here's to many more years of great joy and grand adventures for you both! 

151018-claudiaretter-11.jpg

I wish you all the happiness in the world. XO!

In In the Studio Tags wedding photography
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2020-2021 TeachArts Ohio grant recipient for working with students at the Ohio State School for the Blind and Marion City Schools— thank you, OAC!

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2020 recipient of two Artist in the Community grants for professional development— thank you GCAC!


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