Roeliff Jansen Community Library Art Studio Tour

The Roeliff Jansen Community Library Art Studio Tour is happening this Saturday July 26, 2014 from 10-4. This is a wonderful chance to meet the artists and see where they work, the views and things that inspire them. I’d love to take the tour–but I can’t since I’m one of the artists on the tour. But I have had the good fortune to photograph Bob Blechman, Maj & Lonny Kalfus, HM Saffer, and Leon Smith, and have been at the studios of Jeff Neumann, Bob Rosegarten, and Sue Browdy–so I can report that it is great fun, fascinating, and uplifting to do the tour. And of course I hope you will come visit me at my place in Ancram. 
I am not a studio photographer, so you won’t see my studio, but my home and garden will be open, and I’ll be happy to meet you. All the photos on my walls will be for sale, as well as many very affordable prints on paper (which will be gorgeous framed), and greeting cards. I love having the opportunity to show all the different ways my work can be presented in this amazing digital age. In addition to traditionally matted and framed prints, I love making prints on canvas which are wrapped around a wooden frame. Because there is no glass involved, the prints don’t reflect all the windows, and they give a feeling of being there in the scene that works so beautifully for my landscapes and farm animal photos. Occasionally I print on metal which works wonderfully for watery scenes, or images where I want additional snap. 
art tour 2014
A pre-tour reception with the artists, showing representative examples of their work, will be held at the Library from 5 to 7 p.m., Friday, July 25. The art work will remain on display until August 23rd.
The artists who are opening their studios this year include Matt Aarvold, photographer;  R.O. Blechman, illustrator, cartoonist; Walter Boelke, sculptor; Martha Bone, sculpture/installation; Karen Caldicott, sculptor; Bob Crimi, painter; Howard Danelowitz, painter; B. Docktor, photographer; Lonny Kalfus, photographer; Maj Kalfus, painter; Joel Mark Kupperstein; furniture maker; Jeff Neumann,  painter;  H M Saffer II, painter;  Doris Simon; painter; Nancy Rutter, painter; Leon Smith, sculptor; and Dennis Wheeler, painter; Bob Rosegarten, sculptor; Lizbeth Shelley, painter and Sue Browdy, ceramic artist.
Tickets for the tour and reception are $30 and may be purchased at the Library or online atwww.roejanlibrary.org

The Roeliff Jansen Community Library, which is chartered to serve Ancram, Copake and Hillsdale, is located at 9091 Rt. 22, approximately one mile south of the light at the intersection of Routes 22 and 23 in Hillsdale. For information on hours and events, call 518-325-4101, or visit the library’s website atwww.roejanlibrary.org.

 

Essential Moments: Photographs by B. Docktor at Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center in Kingston

 

Essential Moments: Photographs by B. Docktor

at the Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center in Kingston, NY

Opening reception July 12, 2014 from 4-6pm. All are welcome.

The show will run through September 30, 2014.

 

Essential Moments Photography by B. Docktor at Kingston LGBTQ Center

 

Virginia Apuzzo Hall in the Center’s lovely old building at the corner of Wall and John Streets is a large room that allows me to show a broad range of work. Here’s what I’ll be showing: animals from Columbia and Dutchess County farms are seen up close in a way that we rarely get to view them–alpacas, goats, cows, and sheep with personality!

B. Docktor animal photographer-1

Also showing uplifting images of flowers, water, and landscapes. Every exhibit that I do gives me the chance to see how these images work in different spaces, in different configurations. I love this design process; figuring out how to piece together the puzzle to make it look like the work was created just for this space. Aside from the joy of making the images, I really get into combining them to make something more powerful than one image alone, and seeing how they change the feel of a space.

B. Docktor farm photographer-1

I was encouraged by Marcuse Pfeifer, the former NYC gallerist and manager of the Center’s exhibitions, to show photos that I don’t usually exhibit. One of these sets is of dogs and features the kind of spontaneous, unposed movement that I love to capture.

B. Docktor dog photographer-1

The other set is a group of images of gay people, which I want to show simply because I have them, they are rarely seen, and in general we hardly every get to see images of lesbians and gays. I don’t think I’ve ever seeing a group like this exhibited–some are of gay weddings and couples I’ve photographed in the last few years; some are friends, some are well known lesbian performers.

B. Docktor gay wedding photograph-1

I grew up in the 50s and 60s knowing I was gay and never seeing images of gay people. I remember the first time I ever saw an out person in print. It was author Merle Miller on the cover of the New York Times Magazine in 1971, with his piece “What It Means To Be A Homosexual.” That photo and his article affected me so deeply because at that time, we never saw anything like that in the mainstream press. We were starved for information about each other. Thank goodness for change, for having an LGBTQ Center, and for the lovely folks who opened up to me and my camera.

Apuzzo Hall is named for Ginny Apuzzo, the Founding President of the Hudson Valley LGBTQ Center, and one of our nation’s great gay and lesbian rights activists. The Center is at 300 Wall Street and is open 9:30-5:00 Monday-Friday and 10-2 most Saturdays. The show will run through September 30, 2014.

Essential Moments at Cinnamon Indian Cuisine Closing Reception June 8, 2014 from 4-6pm

The Closing Party for Essential Moments at Cinnamon Indian Cuisine is Sunday June 8, 2014 from 4-6pm. The show will be viewable through Monday night June 9.
I am grateful to Shiwanti Widyarathna, Cinnamon Indian Cuisine’s owner, for the invitation to exhibit  Essential Moments–a beautiful collection of photographs of farm animals and scenes from Dutchess and Columbia County. Some of the locations represented at Essential Moments are Coach Farm in Pine Plains, Dashing Star Farm in Millerton, Herondale Farm in Ancramdale, and Spruce Ridge Alpaca Farm in Old Chatham.
Also included are closeups of nature–water and flower images that have a soothing and joy-giving affect in healthcare environments and business offices.
This exhibit has resulted in a permanent installation at the new offices of Ettinger Law Firm in Southampton, NY. Some of the images chosen are larger versions of those exhibited at Cinnamon, as well as others not in this exhibit.
Cinnamon Indian Cuisine serves contemporary Indian food rooted in age-old traditions and has received a 5-star rating from Hudson Valley Magazine. That magazine also rated Cinnamon as the best Indian restaurant in the Hudson Valley in 2012. Cinnamon is at 5856 Route 9, south of the village. For more information please call 845-232-5430. 
Every gathering I’ve had at Cinnamon–from the lovely opening reception with food donated by Coach and Herondale Farms–to meals with family and friends has been absolutely delightful and delicious. Shiwanti and Chaminda Widyarathna, the gracious owners/chef of Cinnamon have a knack for making their guests feel so welcome, and the food is wonderful! I want to thank Alex Lage for introducing me to Shiwanti.
More photos of the installation at Cinnamon, and Ettinger Law Firm are below. To view my website, click here.

 

Cinnamon Flyer closing

 

 

Below: Photos from the exhibit Essential Moments at Cinnamon Indian Cuisine
Cinnamon opening-5

Cinnamon opening-20

Cinnamon opening-22

 

Cinnamon opening-33

Below is one of the 18 images installed into Ettinger Law Firm in Southampton. This image was made close to my home in Ancram–one of the fields cultivated by Coach Farm–and it looks fantastic on that wall at 5 feet wide. This is how my images should be seen! It’s amazing how the sharpness holds up printed on canvas at that size–they really make an impression. I had so much fun working with Michael Ettinger to select the images, decide which walls they should go on, and at what size. He wanted a group of images that have thematic coherence and my landscapes, animals and nature fit the bill. He also loved the fact that I can make each image exactly the right size for a particular space. I love doing this, and seeing the smiles on people’s faces when they enter the space and see the images.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Remembering Irv Docktor and the Fort Lee Home

The article below was written by Joanne Palmer and appeared in The Jewish Standard April 4, 2014.  Paintings and vintage photos by Irv Docktor. Photography by B. Docktor

The Little House in The Big Woods
Artist’s Family Remembers Growing Up in Fort Lee

The three children grew up in the middle of the woods. There were acres of land all around the house; waterfalls tumbled from the rocky hills and splashed down in their rush toward the mighty color-shifting river far below. There were trees to climb, trails to blaze, rocks to scale. For half of the year, glorious canopies of trees shaded their view; when the leaves fell, the children could see the river, and the ships that steamed silently upriver to unload and then headed back south again, out to sea. It was a perfect pastoral scene, the backdrop for a bucolic 19th-century childhood.

The house photographed by Irv in 1957

The house photographed by Irv in 1957

Then pull the camera back a bit. You’ll see that the river is the Hudson, the time the second half of the 20th century, and the town is Fort Lee. The house, built in the 1920s, still stands — still hidden, still improbable, still offering views of jaw-dropping beauty. The children’s mother, formally Mildred Docktor but more often Mitzie, 93, lives there still. Her husband, the Docktor family patriarch, Irving (and it was still a time and a place and a family where it was both fair and accurate to call him that), who died in 2008, was a painter and illustrator who created, among many other works, the iconic cover art for the paperback versions of “The Brothers Karamazov” and “War and Peace.” The family did not come to that extraordinary place accidentally. Both Mitzie Himmelstein, as she was then, and Irv Docktor, who was born in 1918, grew up in Philadelphia. Her family owned a restaurant in Center City, five blocks from Independence Hall, logically enough called Himmelstein’s. “There were three Jewish restaurants on the block,” she said. “The one across the street claimed to be kosher. We never made any claims. But we served Jewish food — meatballs, kishkes, brains, and gefilte fish on Fridays.” The restaurant seated 150 people on its ground floor, and reserved the second floor, the banquet hall, for weddings, bar mitzvahs, and other parties. The family lived on the third floor. Her father, Sam, also ran the restaurant at the Cosmopolitan Club in Atlantic City, and she occasionally would work there. A large sugar bowl, substantial, old, heavily engraved, reminds her of it. “The restaurant was on the ground floor, but the kitchen was in the basement,” she remembered ruefully. “There was a dumbwaiter, but still…” Irv’s family owned a pet shop a few blocks away from Himmelstein’s. That venture grew out of his own entrepreneurial father’s work selling animal food. “He used to go around with a wheelbarrow to deliver it,” Mitzie said. “Finally, he opened the store.” Irv and Mitzie did not know each other, although they lived close to each other. He went to Central High School, an academic boys’ school; she went to its mirror, the Philadelphia High School for Girls. He went on to the Philadelphia Museum College of Art, and she went to the Philadelphia College of Optometry, where she was one of only a handful of women. Irv Docktor went off to war — he was in the Philippines, doing aerial photography — when his father died. His mother, Bertha, continued to run the store, and she regularly stopped off at Himmelstein’s for supper. Mitzie, meanwhile, had become an optometrist, and she managed an optometry store. The mothers got together, and soon Irv was writing to Mitzie regularly. (But not until he had requested and she had sent him a photograph of herself, and he decided that she was up to his standards, she recalled.) Finally he came home, the two met, there was a long, romantic trolley ride — and a few months later they were married. Mitzie does not know if Irv was the same kind of unstoppable artist during his childhood that he was throughout their life together, but both she and her children knew him as someone who drew as naturally and constantly as he breathed — someone whose pens and crayons and brushes seemed as integral a part of his fingers as skin and nail and bone; someone who saw no opportunity as too insignificant or sight too minor to be worth capturing. He drew everything. All the time.

Dad & Mom 12.1.07_-55

Mitzie and Irv in December 2007

That is a roundabout way of saying that the pet food packaging in his family store did not escape his attention. He redesigned it. In that expansive postwar world, pet ownership was growing, and so too did the store. Soon, the family moved into the wholesale pet business. Irv, Mitzie, and their oldest child, Mark, had been comfortably ensconced in the family’s above-the-restaurant Philadelphia home, but they went off to New York to grow their business. The Docktors found themselves in Flushing, just a few doors down from his younger brother, with a pet store in Hempstead and another in Levittown, both on Long Island. As is often the case, though, there were family problems. The brother basically absconded. “We were left with certain bills and responsibilities that we shared with him, but he wasn’t there,” Mitzie said delicately. “We had a problem. I was worried about losing my house.” As the pet business went south, Irv relied more on his art. He freelanced, showing his art to publishers, getting commissions, producing book covers. He got work through Grosset and Dunlop, and then from Harper’s — from a vanished world of once-independent publishers — but he did not take a full-time job. “He never liked having anyone over him,” Mitzie said. Cover art for War and PeaceHis book-cover work, done mainly in the 1950s and ’60s, included genre fiction — thrillers by Patricia Highsmith, mysteries by Christiana Brand and John Dickson Carr, science fiction by Robert A. Heinlein and James Blish, children’s books by Christine Noble Govan and Emmy West — as well as American classics by Edgar Allan Poe, Herman Melville, and Erskine Caldwell. His covers have the period’s characteristic dark look, with faces and figures that demand that you, the viewer, compose your own stories about them even before you read theirs. Much of his work, starting then and continuing for the rest of his life, is both psychologically and visually complex. Irv began to teach art at night at the Newark School of Fine Arts. He loved the work, but it was a nasty trip from Flushing. So, in the mid-’50s, he began searching for a house that met his specifications. “It had to have a water view,” Mitzie said. “We looked in Glen Cove,” on Long Island Sound, “and in Yonkers,” on the Hudson in Westchester; they looked at just about everywhere in between, too. Nothing was right — “and then he found this house,” Mitzie said. The only problem was that there already were people living there, and they had not been thinking of moving. But Irv was a charismatic man, and he wanted the house. So he introduced himself, charmed, schmoozed, and waited. Soon, it turned out that its owners were nearing retirement age, the husband hunted and fished, and Florida beckoned. Not long after that, they were on their way south, and the Docktors — Irv, Mitzie, Mark, then 10, Paul, 7, and Barbara, 3 — moved to New Jersey.

Paul posed for the illustrations for Brave Jimmy Stone

Photo of Paul and illustration for Brave Jimmy Stone

Soon after the family moved to Fort Lee, Mitzie became certified as a teacher; she taught middle-schoolers math in Fair Lawn for 29 years. (She earned $4,300 in 1962, her first year as a teacher, she said; she was very proud of it, and continues to be proud of the pension her teaching earned her.)

mark,bimo photo

Mark and friend posed for illustrations for the book, Bimo

photo of Mark and friend posing for illustration for the book Bimo


Irv continued to make both more and less commercial pieces. He did the artwork for “The Illustrated Book of American Folklore,” using his children and their dog as models. (Mark takes great pleasure now in leafing through the book, showing his face and body morphed into a surprising range of legendary American heroes and ragamuffins.) He designed a book cover for Bergdorf Goodman with a drawing that perfectly encapsulated understated New York postwar glamor. He worked on his Heritage series, which showcased legendary Eastern European heroes, without as much emphasis on ragamuffins. His continuous fascination with faces, and whatever it is that lies behind them, always is evident.
He also taught high school students. For 15 years, he taught at the High School of Art and Design in Manhattan — “his only real full-time job,” his widow said — getting to school at least an hour before it opened and staying after it closed, working with the students whose energy and love revitalized him. Many of them figure in his work from that period. In 1980, the Docktors added a studio to the house. Now it has three levels. The bottom-most is at street grade, with what anyone else would think is a spectacular view.

house & dad for Standard-14

The second has a deck that provides an even better, wider, clearer view of river and sky. “Our father would have an art class here on the patio,” Mark said. “When he would have a nude model, when we were young kids, my brother and I would play stickball, and then sneak back through the woods where we could see the class…” The third level, though, is the astonishment. From up there, the view is unbeatable; close enough to be able to understand the vastness of the ships and the river itself, far enough away to overlook miles of it. And the light pours into it through windows and skylights as if it were a tangible substance, like gold. There are lovely old wooden cabinets along some of the walls. Each cabinet drawer holds troves of sketches and prints and pastels and paintings and playbills. Playbills?

Playbill, Sleeping Beauty

Playbill, Sleeping Beauty

Irv and Mitzie loved the opera; they went to listen to music almost every week. At each performance, Irv would draw on his playbill, using one of the many pens he always had in his breast pocket. “Wherever we were, at the opera, at a concert, at the theater, at the ballet, he would be busy sketching,” Mitzie said. “At the ballet, I’d poke him,” she added. “I told him that he really should have been paying attention and watching.” Some of the drawers hold a small representation of the thousands of those playbills. Others hold still-undiscovered treasures. Mark, the oldest of the three Docktor children, is a dentist. (Reader, now is the time for the obligatory Dr. Docktor jokes. In fact, even more hilarity might ensue when you learn that Paul Docktor is an orthopedic surgeon. Another Dr. Docktor. Out of your system? Good. Let’s move on.) Mark remembers his childhood and adolescence in Fort Lee with great nostalgia. By the time he started high school, he began to contribute to the family’s budget. “I had just about every job you could think of, and I knew everyone,” he said. One summer he worked for the town, renewing the yellow marks on curbs. He also delivered pizza and worked at the local root beer stand, and then at the pet shop. Mark put himself through college and dental school by working at a pet store in the Willowbrook Mall — family connections can be helpful, he said. It was a different time, he added, and regulations were very different. Pet stores in malls sold animals that no one now would think of seeing locally outside a zoo. “I sold anteaters and chimps and a white-cheeked gibbon that I used to bring home at night,” Mark said. “Its name was Jasper — Jasper and I really clicked. “Remember that a gibbon is an ape, not a monkey,” he added; in evolutionary terms, it is closer to us. “On Sundays, when the store wasn’t crowded, I’d spin Jasper around,” holding him by the arms and whirling, as a parent might do with a small child. “Sometimes a kid would walk by with an ice cream cone, and Jasper would” — he made a noise, and mimed the cone being gone and the child’s astonishment. “Once I got to the front desk at the clinic at NYU,” where he was in dental school, “and the front desk said ‘You need to call the store in Willowbrook Mall.’ I did, and they said ‘You need to get here right away. Jasper got free, and he is swinging from the chandelier in Marcus Jewelers.’ “So I ran to the mall from the clinic, and I got him down.” What happened to Jasper? “Eventually someone bought him.” Another time, he said, he went to a store in the Bronx, called Bronsons, that “imported exotic wildlife. “They let me go out there and pick things up. I picked up a chimpanzee, and he was banging the cage in the car, so I let him out. He sat on my lap, but then he grabbed the directional signal and bent it. “So I said, ‘Bad boy!’ and put him back in the cage, and then luckily I was able to bend the directional signal back.” Perhaps because the house in which he grew up set the bar very high, the house in which Mark and Maggie Docktor now live, and where their three daughters grew up, is unusual, too. Its core was built in 1804; the Docktors are just the seventh owners, and he has collected a copy of most of the deeds that transferred the house from one family to the next, along with maps that show Tenafly’s changes over the last two centuries. The house is full of his father’s art — hanging on the walls, piled in folders, put neatly away in drawers. Irv and Mitzie’s Docktor’s daughter, who now is called B. and lives in Ancram in upstate New York, is a professional photographer; like her father, in much of her work she concentrates on faces, finding truth and beauty in the absolute individuality of each of her subjects.

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Pencil sketch of B and her dog Rudy

Growing up in that Fort Lee house was “phenomenal,” B. said. “We had so much privacy and freedom. To both be in the woods and have that view of the city — it was the house that everybody wanted to be in.

“It was a magical place.” Fort Lee has undergone a “huge transformation — and not one I’m happy with,” she added. “It kind of breaks my heart. Really, they paved Paradise, and put in a parking lot.” Although much of the magic was inherent in the house, another part came from her family. Everyone loves her mother, she said; as for her father, “he was a creative force. His output was phenomenal. He was just so stimulated by everything visual. He couldn’t ever get enough of looking at things. “He was insatiable visually.” Although she chose a different medium than her father did, she thinks it is no accident that she followed him into the visual arts. “When we would go places, the thing to do with my father was go to museums,” she said. “He could never get enough. “He would stand in front of something for a really long time, and he would have you look at it, and really explore it.” He taught her how to really look, how to go down through layer after layer to see the underlying structure, and not to forget the surface either. “I remember a lot of time his saying, ‘Do you see this? Or this? Or this?’ A lot of the time I couldn’t see it at first, but then I could see it, and then I’d see more and more.” He taught her to appreciate shapes, too. “A lot of his work has complex, interwoven figures,” she said. “You’re not exactly sure where one starts and the other leaves off.” Like her father’s, many of B.’s images are of faces. (Some of them are posted on her website, http://www.bdocktorphotography.com.) She has taken many pictures of farm animals, and they are entrancing. They seem to know things. (It’s odd, she mused, that the most popular of her photos are her farm animals. Those are the images that people are most likely to buy and hang on their walls. They will buy photos of their own dogs, not of anyone else’s, she said, but they are entirely comfortable with random farm animals.) “My imagery is very simple and graphic compared to his, but I learned about composition from him,” B. said. There is something about the way I see and compose an image that is a direct result of my father’s influence on me.” And she still is diving through the layers of the visible, to keep on learning.

Heritage

Heritage

“I have one piece of his where I can still see more and more,” she said. “Every time I look at it, I see more.”

Essential Moments

Photography Exhibition by B. Docktor
Location: Cinnamon Indian Cuisine in Rhinebeck, NY

Very happy to have the Essential Moments exhibition at Cinnamon Indian Cuisine in Rhinebeck, NY! The exhibit opens on April 5 from 4-6pm and runs  through May 1. Hudson Valley Magazine rated Cinnamon Indian Cuisine as the best Indian restaurant in the Hudson Valley in 2012. 

I’d like to thank Shiwanti Widyarathna, Cinnamon Indian Cuisine’s owner, for the invitation to exhibit  Essential Moments–a beautiful collection of photographs of farm animals and scenes from Dutchess and Columbia County. Some of the locations represented at Essential Moments are Coach Farm in Pine Plains, Dashing Star Farm in Millerton, Herondale Farm in Ancramdale, and Spruce Ridge Alpaca Farm in Old Chatham.

Also showing closeups of nature–water and flower images that have a soothing and joy-giving affect in the offices of hospitals, doctors and therapists who have chosen to decorate with these photos.

Cinnamon Indian Cuisine serves contemporary Indian food rooted in age-old traditions and has received a 5-star rating from Hudson Valley Magazine. Cinnamon is at 5856 Route 9, south of the village. For more information please call 845-232-5430.

Essential Moments at Cinnamon Indian Cuisine

If you are interested in holding the exhibition Essential Moments, please contact B. Docktor at 518-329-6239

Great dog for adoption

This post is written by my dear friend Kathleen Corby who volunteers at Animal Farm Foundation, the wonderful organization that does so much great work on behalf of “pit bull” dogs. That is where I got John Boy from, and when they ask me for a favor, I am happy to give something back to this great rescue and advocacy group.

Kathleen wrote: I am looking for the perfect forever home for the best boy in the whole world. His name is MUMFORD. As a volunteer at AFF, I spend a lot of time with Mumford (don’t tell the other dogs, but he is my very favorite!). And I am not alone on this–he actually has the title of “Volunteer Favorite.” Mumford has also done some volunteering of his own, educating local school students about dogs. So if you are curious, yes, Mumford is great with kids! (but not too crazy about cats!)

Mumford makes me laugh out loud every day. He loves to go for walks, run and romp within a fenced in yard, snuggle, chew bones and learn. He’s so smart, he has a BA graduate degree from APDT’s C.L.A.S.S. program! Not bad for a shelter dog you may say. Well not bad for a deaf dog either! Yes, Mumford is deaf, but that doesn’t stop him one little bit from enjoying his life to the fullest!

In the hopes of getting him adopted, I asked B to drop by AFF to make some photographs of Mumford showing off all the signs he knows (like “SIT”, “DOWN”, “STAY”, “SHAKE”, “LEAVE IT”, and “WAIT AT DOOR” to name just a few — see, I told you he was smart!). With a face as handsome as Mumford’s we couldn’t bring in just any old photographer — a handsome model deserves the best person behind the lens! By the end of the shoot, Mumford had us laughing as usual as he played “Find It” under his platform.  

Mumford will make the best loyal lifetime friend. I promised him the perfect family and I will not quit until he finds them. Check him out on AFF’s Adoption site: Are you the one Mumford’s been waiting for?

Click here for more info on this beautiful boy. Do you know a deaf dog? Please leave a comment.

Mumford

The pet photographer, B. Docktor photographs pets, farms and lots more in the Hudson Valley, Berkshires, NY, and NJ. Call me to capture the love, the action, the beauty and humor of your pets and animals: 518-329-6239.

Essential Moments: Photography by B. Docktor at Manna Dew Café in Millerton, NY

This month, my photography exhibit “Essential Moments” is at the great restaurant, Manna Dew Café, in Millerton, NY. When I install a show of my work, I love getting to transform the way a space feels. Manna Dew is in a lovely old building a few doors from the Millerton Moviehouse, and the photos, (many are canvas gallery wraps) look excellent against the old wainscoted walls. Beautiful local farms are represented in this show–the Coach Farm goats, sheep and cows from Herondale Farm, Spruce Ridge Alpaca Farm, and chicken and fin sheep from Dashing Star Farm.

I am often amazed at how strongly people respond to my animal “portraits.” I believe it’s because I get close enough to really show their eyes that we feel so much kinship with them. You really get a sense of a personality. I am lucky to have access to these beautiful places and amazing animals!

The reception is Thursday February 20, 2014, from 5-7pm.

 

Essential Moments: Photography by B. Docktor

 

Hudson Valley fine art photographer B. Docktor specializes in creating images of nature, animals, and the landscape that are stunningly beautiful, and peaceful. These images have a soothing, healing, sometimes humorous quality that make them perfectly suited for your home or office, and art for healthcare environments: hospitals, medical offices, spas, rehab facilities. Please call me at 518-329-6239 to discuss a custom installation. View portfolio: http://www.bdocktorphotography.com/Nature/Nature-Photography-Fine-Art/

Photograph Judith Hill performing at Helsinki Hudson

I’m so lucky–I got to photograph Judith Hill performing at Helsinki Hudson last weekend. She was my favorite singer on The Voice last year, and she blew me away with her great voice, her piano playing, and her fantastic arrangements. She had been singing backup with Michael Jackson, and was to be his duet partner on his This Is It tour.

Judith grew up in a musical family; her mom is a pianist from Tokyo, and her dad, an African American bass player in a funk band.

On The Voice and at Helsinki Hudson, Judith did a fantastic version of  “Feelin’ Good,” which is best known by Nina Simone. Michael Bublé  also covered it. I have loved this song since I first heard it in 1964. It was written by Anthony Newley and Leslie Bricusse for the musical The Roar of the Greasepaint–The Smell of the Crowd. Judith could go from jazz to rock with such ease, and dare I say it: I prefer her version to MJ’s of “The Way You Make Me Feel.” Love it so much I use it when I teach Zumba!

As I’ve been hunting and pecking around the internet for info on Judith, I came across the video of The Voice “knockout round” duet between Judith & Karina Iglesias. This is some powerhouse singing–check it out here. Love the intensity of this performance!

It was so great to see and hear her live, right in my own backyard, at Helsinki Hudson–such a great, intimate venue. Of course I enjoyed getting a chance to photograph her too! More here:

judith hill at helsinki hudson

 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

Photographer B. Docktor specializes in capturing the spirit, action, and energy of performances. 518-329-6239.

Photographs Matter!

dec 2013 portrait em blast crop

Creative portrait photographer B. Docktor specializes in capturing the spirit, beauty and joy of your family gatherings. I am based in the Hudson Valley and happily work in NY, NJ, MA, CT or wherever you want me to be! Call me at 518-329-6239 to document your life’s most precious moments. View portfolio http://www.bdocktorphotography.com/Portfolio/Portraiture-photographer/

Preserving The Essence of Something Happening Now

B. Docktor dog photography-20

 

 

 

A Need To Make Photographs

 

B. Docktor dog photographer-6Why do I feel a need to make photographs? I always have. And it’s hard to put it into words. It feels so important to me . . . to preserve the essence of something happening now in a way that thrills, to spark our memories later, to show future generations who we are, what and who we love. This week, a tragic fire struck a family that I know from having photographed their dog Santiago (above), for The Unexpected Pit Bull 2014 Calendar. The fire took the lives of six of their precious dogs. 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 
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Kara & Erich train dogs, perform with the dogs, and foster dogs in need. Kara’s sister set up a YouCaring page to help raise money to get them back on their feet. http://www.youcaring.com/help-a-neighbor/help-kara-and-erich-get-back-on-their-feet/111258 
 
She wrote:
“Kara and Erich are, to say the least, animal lovers. I have never met two people so dedicated to helping out the furry friends of the world. They teach classes, they put on shows, they honestly LOVE what they do. With that, they also foster dogs in need. Quite often, they end up not only being foster “parents” but adoptive parents. Last night their family went from 2 people and 16 dogs to 2 people and hopefully 10 dogs.”
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Erich & Santiago

 
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B. Docktor dog photographer-12The day before Thanksgiving, I went down to Millbrook to help look for their dog Betty who had been missing since the fire– 2 nights and a day. Thank goodness she showed around 1pm, right at the house. You can see more from this session by clicking any photo, or the link below http://www.bdocktorphotography.com/Client-Access/Animal-Portraits/Santiago
My heart goes out to Erich & Kara–such a devastating loss.

Your comments are welcome.

Award-winning pet photographer B. Docktor photographs pets in the Hudson Valley, Berkshires, NY, and NJ. Call me to capture the love, the action, the beauty and humor of your pets and animals: There is a need to make photographs. 518-329-6239.