A Collaborative Of Artful Nudity

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Keyhole Gallery Studio Outdoor Session

Keyhole Gallery, a collaborative of the artful nude is hosting a Photographers Studio

Event: Photographers Studio
Theme: Outdoor session
This is a working studio – please bring your own camera
Models will be nude.

When: We Meet Every Second Wednesday
Next: Wednesday – June 8th
Time:  a tad earlier – 6:30 – to get the most out of the daylight
Where: private – a backyard, call please if you are interested in the location details. Bug repellant recommended
still seeking models and photographers.

RSVP by Monday June 6th -  708.482.0678
Try to keep all gallery correspondence at this gmail address:
karenatkeyholegallery at gmail.com
dahlia by karen hanrahan

Next Salon :: Nude Photography And Outdoor Settings

Announcements: 

Photographers Anne Scott and Karen Hanrahan have added to their personal galleries.

Oil Painting is now complete.

Keyhole Gallery is looking for interesting outdoor locations for shoots next month – suggestions welcome.

Seeking models and photographers to join our collaborative.

Reminder:  contributing photographers and writers – submissions for personal galleries are due at the beginning of the month.  Limit is 4 per month

Keyhole Gallery, a creative collaborative of the artful nude is hosting a Photographers Salon

We’d love for you to join!

Event: Photographers Salon
Theme: Discussion about nudes and outdoor locations
When: We Meet Every Second Wednesday 
Next Gathering:  Wednesday – May 11th – 2011
Time: 7 – 9
Where: Karen Hanrahan’s home 
703 S Allin St
Bloomington, IL 61701 
RSVP by Monday March 7th - 708.482.0678


please communicate at this gmail address:
karenatkeyholegallery@gmail.com

Oil Painting Complete!

for those of you who visited us during the area artist showcase

i shared the beginnings of a painting in progress from one of my photographs

i am very excited to share that the oil painting by Fabrice Martin is now finished!

The painting is available for purchase here

Fabrice mentioned two upcoming shows in Paris, one juried  - he has chosen his work of me as his submission!

I will share more as I know!!

Virtual Solo Exhibition :: Scapes By Karen Hanrahan

Keyhole Gallery presents:

Solo Exhibition  – Body Scapes By  Photographer Karen Hanrahan

Virtually showing through May 10th, 2011

Request for visitor comments.

All artists find constructive critique a necessity and an integral part of the creative process. Keyhole Gallery kindly requests that visitors to this exhibition take an interactive role by leaving comments about our work. Your input is greatly appreciated.

welcome to my basement, my lamps, a mirror, an ottoman, a dark quilt – above image – testing the space

below captures via reflection, tripod shots and straight mirror imagery:

Photographers Studio :: BodyScapes

Event: Photographers Studio

Theme: Body Scapes – do it yourself set

When: We meet every second wednesday

Next event: Wednesday – April 13th – 2010

Time: 7 – 9

Where: Photographer – Karen Hanrahan’s Home

Miller Park – 703 S Allin St

Parking is street side facing north or in the church parking lot.

Please be on time.

Once shoot begins I will have my door locked for privacy.

karenatkeyholegallery at gmail.com to rsvp

image by karen hanrahan

Collaborative Hiatus

Both my dear and very “key” collaborators Ron and Anne, have shared that they are taking hiatus from our creativity together here at Keyhole Gallery.   I had a sense that schedules were becoming very full, focus was shifting and that other things needed their undivided attention.  I completely understand and have not one bad feeling towards the announcements about this break.  The news has left me at a bit of a loss as to what’s next.  Since I founded the idea of our gallery and they signed on to help move it forward, the three of us were the tangible thing we had going.   Hosting monthly studio and salon sessions always included them.  Until the fall it’s now just me.

Locally anyway.

or seemingly ….

Today a blog friend shared an image.  He was talking with Twyla Tharp at a book signing. Wow.

It struck me how much collaboration means to me, and why I look forward to what might be next for the gallery.

Below in italics describes Twyla Tharp’s new book: The Collaborative Habit

While the description speaks to perhaps the dangers or downside of  collaboration,  Our Twyla has a 40 year history of one collaboration or another.   It’s how she built her empire/her brand!  After reading the description of her book I am left with how strongly I feel about not doing things alone.  Together is for sure a better way to strive towards just about anything.

Many efforts in my life are in conjunction with others, and wouldn’t be something remarkable without the experience of working collaboratively.

I joke often about coming out of the closet creatively with my photography.   I mean that figuratively ( yes, pun intended) and literally, and even more so since the gallery had a successful live exhibition this last week.

Hundreds of people now “know”

I am really saying  I don’t want to be an artist, naked and alone in a community that overall is more traditional in it’s sensibilities.

Yet right now that’s exactly what I am.

Alone and artfully nude!

Can’t wait to see what happens next!

I am not discounting my virtual participants.  Nor can I discount what we have begun here at Keyhole Gallery. I feel exceptionally proud.

We have plenty to still create too!

Thank you to all!

Karen Hanrahan ~ Founder:  Keyhole Gallery.



In a career that has spanned four decades, choreographer Twyla Tharp has collaborated with great musicians, designers, thousands of dancers, and almost a hundred companies. She’s experienced the thrill of shared achievement and has seen what happens when group efforts fizzle. Her professional life has been — and continues to be — one collaboration after another.

In this practical sequel to her national bestseller The Creative Habit, Tharp explains why collaboration is important to her — and can be for you. She shows how to recognize good candidates for partnership and how to build one successfully, and analyzes dysfunctional collaborations. And although this isn’t a book that promises to help you deepen your romantic life, she suggests that the lessons you learn by working together professionally can help you in your personal relationships.

These lessons about planning, listening, organizing, troubleshooting, and using your talents and those of your coworkers to the fullest are not limited to the arts; they are the building blocks of working with others, like if you’re stuck in a 9-to-5 job and have an unhelpful boss.

Tharp sees collaboration as a daily practice, and her book is rich in examples from her career. Starting as a twelve-year-old teaching dance to her brothers in a small town in California and moving through her work as a fledgling choreographer in New York, she learns lessons that have enriched her collaborations with Billy Joel, Jerome Robbins, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Bob Dylan, Elvis Costello, David Byrne, Richard Avedon, Milos Forman, Norma Kamali, and Frank Sinatra.

Among the surprising and inspiring points Tharp makes in The Collaborative Habit:

-Nothing forces change more dramatically than a new partnership.

-In a good collaboration, differences between partners mean that one plus one will always equal more than two. A good collaborator is easier to find than a good friend. If you’ve got a true friendship, you want to protect that. To work together is to risk it.

-Everyone who uses e-mail is a virtual collaborator.

-Getting involved with your collaborator’s problems may distract you from your own, but it usually leads to disaster.

-When you have history, you have ghosts. If you’re returning to an old collaboration, begin at the beginning. No evocation of old problems and old solutions.

-Tharp’s conclusion: What we can learn about working creatively and in harmony can trans- form our lives, and our world.

book description source


Gallery Benefit A Success!

Great attendance, art sold, T-Shirts purchased and monies donated for MCATF!

Congratulations Keyhole Gallery your benefit event was a success!!

Artists involved, the exhibitition …a terrific evening for all of downtown.

P.S. and Anne’s dog, I couldn’t resist.

Artists: Anne Scott, Karen Hanrahan, Ron Frazier

images by karen hanrahan

Gallery Showing Benefits AIDS Task Force

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE…..

 

Keyhole Gallery Group hosts benefit for McLean County AIDS Task Force

Keyhole Gallery Group will host an Art Show benefit for the McLean County AIDS Task Force April 1 from 4 to 8 p.m., at 313 N. Main St, Bloomington. The group is a collaborative of photographers whose focus is on the artful nude. All proceeds from the sale of art during the evening will be donated to the 17-year-old, all-volunteer service organization. MCATF lost all of its State funding this last year. The organization offers education and  offers support against the spread of HIV/AIDS in McLean County.

The Keyhole Gallery Group show is part of a larger area artists’ showcase sponsored by the Downtown Bloomington Association for the April First Friday event that will feature over 140 artists in 20 plus locations downtown Bloomington.

 

For maps and further information:

http://www.downtownbloomington.org/20/264.html

For information about MCATF, call 309 -827-2437, or stop in at 313 N Main, St., Bloomington.

Keyhole Galleries virtual exhibitions can be viewed at http://www.keyholegallery.wordpress.com

Contact: K a r e n  H a n r a h a n, cell: (708) 482-0678 or e-mail: karenatkeyholegallery@gmail.com

 



 

Participating Writer :: Amelie Saens

Welcome to –Writer Amelie Saens

The nape, exposed, awaiting the kiss of the camera.

Amélie Saens is a multi-disciplinary artist, she derives her love of the arts from an early education in observation. The initial isolation and consequent appreciation for solitude has afforded her a distinct remote view of the world at large.

The formative years often spent in seclusion allowed Amelie a private seat in the social theater of life. She navigates her own ethereal world of sound and vision with sensual ease. Far from being an idealist, she has grown a taste for unflinching realism, language reveals truth among shapes and shades. Textures play against known surfaces and hidden reflexes, all interconnected by emotive content.

As a reclusive artiste, Amelie remains a minimalist in essence, she uses available materials to express her interpretation of natural elements. She sustains faith in her principles of natural order; no material used in her artistic creations has been conventionally obtained. Whether collage, montage or assemblage, painting or sketching the medium is re-purposed, reshaped and anew with an eye to pleasure.

The bare form, the essential offered in simple words printed or murmured, visual, aural or textural, there but for humanity– unveiled.


:

Turning away from the day
She softly sinks into cotton dreams.

A single line follows a curve,
in divine solitary purpose,
along hills and hollows.


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