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2010 HAWAI'I PHOTO EXPO WINNERS
(Click on a thumbnail image to open a
larger image in a new window.)
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FIRST PLACE
Traditions, Burma
Steve Garon
Ever
since my Peace Corps days in Nepal, I have enjoyed documenting my
travels through photography. Thirty years later, I still make most
of my negatives during overseas trips, medical missions, and local
camping weekends. I love to photograph different worlds with a 4x5
inch view camera – my negatives become cherished souvenirs. For
me, a large format approach to photography formalizes and
strengthens images. In my darkroom here in Hilo, I print large
silver gelatin photographs using traditional black and white
chemistry. All aspects of the printing process are controlled in an
effort to craft a final print with clarity, luminosity, and
content. I seek timeless portraits, contemplative landscapes, and
expressive moments. Several photographs have received awards and
some have been acquired by the Hawaii State Foundation on Culture
and the Arts. I look forward to new challenges in large format
photography, wherever the journey may take me.
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SECOND
PLACE Koi Pond
Kathleen T. Carr
Kathleen T.
Carr, is a professional and fine art photographer, teacher, author,
and a former Creative Uses Consultant for Polaroid. She holds a BFA
in Photography from Ohio University, and studied extensively with
Minor White before working for Aperture Magazine. Her work has been
exhibited widely and has appeared in numerous books and
periodicals, including her books, Polaroid Transfers: A Complete
Visual Guide for Creating Image and Emulsion Transfers, Polaroid
Manipulations: A Complete Visual Guide to Creating SX-70, Transfer,
and Digital Prints (Amphoto Books), and To Honor the Earth:
Reflections on Living in Harmony with Nature (HarperSanFrancisco).
Her current passions are black and white infrared photography and
filming wild dolphins. She resides on the Big Island of Hawaii.
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THIRD PLACE
Our Cousin
Tom Whitney
I have been primarily involved in
documenting the Hawaiian and Native American cultures and the
Warriors Against Diabetes over the past decade. These cultures are
closer to the earth than my dour Northern New England religious
beginning. “Our Cousin” represents my attempt to use photography
share my “religion” and our relation to the earth. We leave Darwin
in the dust when we contemplate the vast primordial sea of single
celled organisms that that was first on this earth for a billion
years or so. During that time, stardust, lightning strikes,
ultraviolet radiation and lava flows under the sea created
multi-celled organisms in an ever more potent organic soup from
which everything living thing on earth evolved. We share cell
structure with everything in nature. Thus we are the cousins of
everything alive in this heaven on earth here in paradise, including
the plants and the birds and the bees. They are all part of our
‘ohana.
I created the photograph by taking close-ups of a Hawaiian
Christmas wreath and using Photoshop to copy out parts of the wreath
and flip them and match them up with the original parts and see the
effects of bilateral symmetry to create faces and body parts. There
was a lot of that kind of nudging that took place to create Our
Cousin. The black was formed by 100% of each of the CMYK colors.
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HONORABLE MENTION
Waikupanaha Fury David Teves
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HONORABLE MENTION
Lapakahi Village
Jayne Pinc
Aloha!
Originally a country gal from mid-Ohio, I have lived also in
Seattle, Arizona, and wilderness areas of Alaska. I am now living a
lifetime dream in the Hawaiian Islands (for over 20 years). The
beauty of this island forms the backdrop of my landscape photos and
I have a special affinity for trees, forests & flora, and the
enigmatic nostalgia of the older buildings found here. After many
years enjoying photography, I now tend to view the world as
compositions seen thru a finder and enjoy both the immediacy of the
snapshot and, by printing, the permanency of the final art form.
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HONORABLE MENTION
Paris Metro 2
Ken Goodrich
My passion for
photography was ignited many years ago when I began documenting the
vanishing culture of the Otomi Indians of Tlacotlapilco Mexico. This
spark was quickly kindled and expanded to include explorations of
fine art photography after I moved back to the United States. Later
I explored special effects films and processes, image compositing,
and macro photography. For much of my photographic career, I have
focused on visual design for multi-image events (projected imagery
with music and dance). I continue this journey today using the
tools of digital photography and editing.
In 2007, my wife Mary and I founded Hawaii Photo
Retreat, providing photographic workshops and tours on the Big
Island. We are based in Volcano Village on Hawaii Island.
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HONORABLE MENTION Juggs the Position
Joseph Laceby
Born in the shadow of Tulsa OK, 1970. Farm boy by
nature but grew up the king of dirt ball wars. My interest in art
began early, very early. My father was the developer for the Tulsa
police crime lab and I spent many a summers hiding out in that lab.
I was given a tall stool to watch all of the processes but I was
told to close my eyes when some of the final crime scene prints were
washing...( I peeked). I remember the fascination that 7 year old
had in a place that few children were allowed. My father's darkroom
fascinated me, not only in a visual sense; but it also imbedded
within me a memory of the non-visual stimulants associated
with a darkroom. The feeling of trusting darkness, the coolness of
the constantly flowing water, and the smells that would creep around
from the different chemicals. Many years later in a college
photography class, this imbedded memory was awakened. It allowed me
to bring back to the medium the playfulness of a child's vision from
which it was personally discovered. It's from this that my prints
say what they need to say without the complexities of the critically
educated adult eye. The cyanotype process allows this to happen in
the very nature of the final print. But like anyone true to their
vision, the physical deconstruction and reorganization of the
print is where the excitement lies for me. I'll never claim to be a
purist, only an artist. A maker of things.
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FIRST PLACE Shelter
Natalie Christensen
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SECOND PLACE Back Flip
Thunda Souza
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People's Choice Award |
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Eye of the Tiger
Madelina Martinez is a "local
Pahala Girl" born and raised. She bought herself her first
digital camera this year to photograph her grandsons May-day
program. Since then photographing life in Hawaii has become a
passion. Madelina's husband Sonny works at the Panaewa
Rainforest zoo and this has facilitated her interest in
capturing the patterns and intensity of the Rainforest
inhabitants and fauna. While Madelina states she is just
starting her photographic journey, her expressive photos are
displayed through-out the Kau Hospital Rural Health Clinic for
both the residents and staff to enjoy, she looks forward to
expanding her knowledge and skills.
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