Time Traveling

Past, Present, Future

A couple of years ago I took on the task of scanning and uploading all of our treasured family photographs, many of which are the only ones known to exist.

The photograph below has been tucked into one of our family photo albums since I can remember. In it are my then 11 year old mother, and her older sister. They are standing at the grave site of their mother. I have no idea what time of year the photograph was taken, but it was clearly winter in rural north Alabama. I believe it would have been 1955, or there abouts.

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

 

Sudden Revelations

When you scan images onto your computer, it allows you to view them much larger than they actually are. When I pulled this image up on my over-sized monitor, I suddenly saw it in an entirely new way. My young mother’s expression broke my heart. How must it feel, to be all of 11 years old and standing at the side of your mother’s grave?

When I looked at my now-deceased aunt’s face, her quiet intensity was arresting. This was the day she stepped into the role of family matriarch for all her younger siblings. I believe she was around 25 years old at the time.

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

Paying Homage

I couldn’t stop thinking about this photo or my aunt’s fierce face. I kept returning to it. I knew I wanted to do something with it. I wanted to create a piece of art that would do justice to my aunt’s enormous aura of control and command.

From my childhood perspective, I remember her as being an indomitable and towering force to be reckoned with. In her world view, there was a right way and a wrong way. She was staunchly ‘correct’. All fine qualities for someone so young to possess in order to shoulder enormous responsibility. Also characteristics that made it sometimes difficult for those around her to stand their ground and have their own opinions.

Icons

As I have grown into my 5th decade, so many of the people from my youth have passed away. Interesting, these words we use for death.

In my mind, I have begun to think of all these elders from my growing up time as ‘icons’. When you’re a child, the adults around you seem so solid and complete. We only take in their ‘totality’. Children sense none of the uncertainty that I now know plagues everyone.

Awkward Segue

I seem to have written myself into a corner here. I wanted to talk about how much I have always loved Russian Icons, and then everything else would make perfect sense.

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

But maybe it doesn’t have to make perfect sense. Most of the time I don’t understand myself at all, so maybe I should just quit trying to ‘explain’ the artistic process. Artists mull. We muse. Ponder. Percolate. Then, often when we lest expect it, inspiration is upon us and we can hardly get the ideas down fast enough.

Transformation

Finally, in the end, that is exactly how it happened for me and this piece of art. After gestating over this image for almost a year and a half, it came together perfectly, over the course of a few days, just as I had seen it in my mind’s eye.

I see in it my aunt’s quiet, focused intensity, but in death, she has grown larger than life.

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

Storm Gatherer - Copyright © Deborah Wolfe. All rights reserved.

 

 

 

 

Posted in Digital Art Tagged |

New Town, Old Habits.

My impressions of Asheville on a particular Saturday in November.

 

I’m new to Asheville. Well, not entirely new. I have been coming up to these mountains all my life, so I am familiar with a great many things about them. But I have never lived up here before. So I suppose I should say I’m a new resident of the Asheville area.

I felt that disclaimer was important because I used to live in Atlanta before I moved up here. In Atlanta everyone wants to live in the cool/hip/trendy areas, so even if they live 50 miles outside of Atlanta, they’ll STILL say they live in Atlanta. Truth to tell, Atlanta sprawls so far now it’s hard to tell where it ends and Tennessee begins.

I currently live in Mars Hill in a log house on the side of a mountain with ridiculous views. Ridiculous I tell you. I could bore you silly with photo after photo I’ve taken from our front deck. The mountains on a misty morning. The mountains on a sunny day. The mountains in summer. The mountains in autumn. The mountains at sunset. The mountains at sunrise. Wait. Who am I kidding? I’m seldom up before 8 am.

I’ve been tromping around town with camera in hand for a few months, but haven’t posted any photos yet. Like most creatives, I’ve got more images than I’ll ever be able to display in 10 lifetimes. So my mental wheels start grinding and I can’t decide which images to show. Should it be a theme? If so, which theme? Windows? People? Store fronts? Found objects? A season? You can see how this could amuse me for hours, and yet produce nothing of note.

So, in the spirit of JUST DO IT, I’ve decided to just post some images I took while walking around downtown this past Saturday with my partner and her sister. Let’s just call it A Little Slice of Asheville, images with my particular slant on things.

 

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

Pack Square Pig

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

Painted White Guy W/Black Crow On Guitar Who Sings

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

Thomas Wolfe Memorial

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

Window Display - Snow People

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

Lovely sculpture in a gallery window.

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

Jug o' Ballet Slippers - Window Display

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

Window Festooned for the Holidays

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

Sculpture - Patton Avenue

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

Window Display - Ready for the Holidays

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

Down an alley

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

Still alley crawling

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

You guessed it - still in the alley

Asheville Commercial Photographer Deborah Wolfe

Emerging from the alley and heading home. Seriously. This is why I live here.

 

Posted in Out and About