Thursday, July 4, 2019

Photo Portraits: People of Impact in Door County


This is my second time participating in People of Impact, a show in Sister Bay curated by Tom Seagard, owner with his wife Brigitte Kozma of Mill Road Gallery in Sister Bay. (They are both excellent painters and their gallery is well worth a visit.) The People of Impact show opens Saturday at Scandia in Sister Bay and will run until sometime in August.

A Sturgeon Bay resident, I have chosen people who are making the city a better place to live and work. Also, they are people who are fun to be with, so shooting their photographs and talking with them has been enjoyable. You can see the pictures and read about them at my DoorCountyReview blog

Two people who have had great impact in Door County are in this show — as photographers. Dennis Connolly and his wife Bonnie are patrons and sponsors in activities across the county, sometime named, sometime anonymous. Thomas Jordan has published two excellent photography books, one on Door County and another on Sturgeon Bay, with profits going to the Door County Community Foundation. Through his photographic explorations he has uncovered many treasures that I wasn’t aware of, and I have spent a lot of time and mileage exploring the county. (He also has a new book based on a one-week trip to Cuba which is filled with excellent images — it was an amazing productive week. See Novel Bay Books in Sturgeon Bay for a selection of his work including his latest Door County book, a $75 limited edition to benefit Literacy Door County)
Thomas Jordan's books about Door County




Dennis and Thomas are excellent models of people who have moved to Door County and immersed themselves in it, to the benefit of the county.

When I am not following Dennis’s direction to photograph people of impact, I like to do urban street shooting. At home I must admit I shoot an inordinate number of photographs of our three dogs — Zola, a golden retriever named after the French author; Kali, a long-haired German shepherd named after the Indian goddess of destruction; and Tucker, our new two-year old golden who just came with that name.

I’ve exhibited around Door County including Base Camp in Sister Bay, Hope Church Gallerey and TAP in Sturgeon Bay, at GLAS in Sheboygan, at Paterson University in New Jersey and at the Witkin in New York.

I am a freelance writer specializing in financial technology and publishing at forbes.com, the Global Association for Risk Professionals (GARP), and starting soon at The Financial Revolutionist, and in London at Mondo Visione and Banking Technology. I have also written for The Economist, years ago, about shipbulding in Sturgeon Bay.

The People of Impact photography show is at the Measows Gallery, at Scandia Retirement Campus, inside the Independent Living Apts, 10560 Applewood Road, Sister Bay. Opening: 1-3 PM Saturday July 6.

People of Impact in Door County -- Jeff and Sarah Bradley, Artists Guild

The Artists Guild on 3rd Avenue in Sturgeon Bay has one of the largest inventories in the Midwest, unusual for a city of less than 10,000 population, but a boon to the many artists working in Door County.

It’s more than just a supply center, it’s a resource for artists. The Artists Guild has been running a life drawing session on Tuesday evenings since 2005, attracting a dedicated clientele year-round plus vacationers during the summer, college students on school breaks, and area high school students who need some life drawing examples for college or art school applications.

Jeff and Sarah Bradley
Jeff and Sarah Bradley started it as a simple art supply shop when Sarah, who has a degree in drawing and print making from the University of New Hampshire, grew frustrated with having to travel to Chicago for painting supplies.  She is the third generation woman artists in her family.

The store draws a mix of customers, from amateurs to professionals has a mix of materials, from student grade to professional quality.

Four staff members are certified in arts materials and are also practicing painters, so they can discuss the paints, canvases, papers and brushes.


Art supply stores are being hit by the same internet-driven waves of change as book stores and other retailers.

“The whole industry has changed and small art supply stores are disappearing” said Jeff. To compete, it has expanded its children’s section and increased its emphasis on education and coaching.

Artists Guild carries a huge inventory of paints and other art supplies
The art supply community has changed, said Sarah, and has often lost its focus on educating and expertise.

“We offer education within the store and we have been doing that since we opened our doors; the days of just selling a tube of paint are gone.”

They can also discuss the health issues around painting.

Most of the health problems affecting oil painters came from the solvents like spirits and turpentine, but painters can also use safflower oil, linseed oil or walnut oil to clean up, and paint companies have developed water soluble oil paints that feel very similar to traditional oils.

Jeff, who taught high school chemistry for a year, said art paints had a period of rapid innovation in the 1840s through an explosion in the knowledge of chemistry. Ultra marine blue had been very expensive so it was used sparingly until a French artist approached a chemist and they developed French Ultra Marine.

“That changed painting and influenced the Impressionists.”


Another big change came in In 1841 when an American invented the paint tube, which was also important to Impressionists because it made painting outdoors - plein air — much easier. The next big change came in the 1930s and 1940s when the auto industry developed new colors to make cars more attractive.

Artists Guild has one of only 83 Master Certified Framers in the world, Jannine Buechner, who took first place in an international framing competition in Las Vegas.


“People want to come and get their work framed by her,” said Jeff, noting that she has framed originals by Picasso and Degas.  Some owners drop a valuable work off in the morning and want to pick it up that afternoon, but since the store was originally a bank, it has several vaults to secure valuable works of art.

The Bradleys are also active in the community. They donate framing and money to the Miller Art Museum, the Hardy Gallery and the Peninsula School of Art and are a sponsor of the Sturgeon Bay Art Crawl and donate framing to the Boys and Girls Club. Jeff was on the board of Habitat with Glen Rossman.

People of Impact in Door County -- Amy and Buster Crook, Kitty O’Reillys Irish Pub

Kitty O’Reillys Irish Pub, on Oak Street in Sturgeon Bay, has led the revitalization of the city’s Westside since it took over what had been The Stein. In its 10 years, the pub has become a popular spot for lunch, dinner and drinks.

Amy and Buster Crook met while working in Milwaukee at BonTon, the parent company of Younkers. Amy Briggs is a Sturgeon Bay native; her parents ran Briggsville Garden nursery and landscaping, which helps explain the extensive plantings in the outdoor terrace at the pub.

They had limited to no  restaurant experience but they knew what they wanted — an Irish pub that offered a lively venue which welcomed young and old, families and singles

An early vendor looked around their new space and offered his considered opinion: “You guys are nuts.”

Jameson with Amy and Buster Crook at Kitty's
But they have been operating for 10 years and have staff who have stayed with them for 8 or 9 years. This summer they are on the second year of using the J-1 program to bring foreign students to work in the U.S. for the summer. They have 11, from Eastern Europe and a few from Colombia. They bought a house for them.

“That has helped us tremendously,” said Amy, “with hosting and bussing and dishwashing. And it’s amazing to see how fast their English improves in a month. It is a great experience for our American employees, and for our son, Jameson.”

My wife Keli and I have been going there pretty much since it opened. Kitty’s is a comfortable place — the food has always been good to excellent, and the huge Bloody Marys are a great way to start a Saturday or Sunday.

When Buster and Amy saw The Stein for sale, they wanted it immediately. The building has heritage — it is 115-plus years old — but more important, it had outdoor space, although it was a five-foot drop from the pub doorway.

All it needed was dirt, said the landscaper’s daughter. Truckloads later the top level patio was a direct step out. It’s popular in the relatively warm months and overhead heaters, plus some good drinks, can keep it comfortable from mid-May to mid-October

They have dressed the outdoors up with plants and flowers, lots of them.

“It’s in my blood,” said Amy, who likes to garden, and is accustomed to the challenges of a relatively short, chilly planting season in Door County. She has already replaced several plants in what passed for spring in 2019.

Kitty’s is open seven days a week all year long. Kitty’s, the Madison Avenue Wine shop and Sonny’s with its great view of the harbor and the shipyard, now offer plenty of incentive to cross the bay.

People of Impact in Door County -- Margaret Lockwood and Allin Walker, The Lockwood Gallery

The Lockwood Gallery on the corner of 2nd Avenue and Michigan Street in Sturgeon Bay will look familiar to anyone who had been to Margaret Lockwood’s  previous gallery, Woodwalk, in Egg Harbor.

The walls hold her distinctive large abstract and semi-abstract paintings, some of which suggest trees or water, bays and headlands.

The building, which had been empty for 20 years, is one of the oldest in Sturgeon Bay and has at various times times been a bank, offices, and a laundry.


“This is the third building we have bought and renovated in Door County,” said Allin Walker, Margaret’s husband. The first was the schoolhouse on Rt. 42 which is now Juddville  Pottery. Woodwalk’s barn had been part of a dairy farm before they turned it into one of the county’s leading art galleries.

“Every 10 or 11 years we move 10 to 11 miles south, to a building that is 10 to 11 years older than the one we left, and this is also our third set of dogs,” said Margaret.
The street level floor is the gallery — hers are the only paintings — but it also exhibits sculptures, mobiles, pottery and jewelry by others. The second floor is their living quarters and the lower level, which is street level on 1st Avenue, is a garage-style performance space used for theatrical productions by, among others, the Door Knockers.







“We have created a space and we invite people to try it out. It’s a continuation of what we did with the barn at Woodwalk where we opened it up for whatever came along — musical performances, fundraisers and eventually even weddings,” said Margaret. “We are used to having things happening around us. The extra energy is good.”

They are working with Jeremy Popelka and Stephanie Trenchard, whose glass works and gallery is on the other side of the street, and The Holiday Music Motel to create the Steel Bridge Creative District.




Sturgeon Bay is growing in importance as a place for Door County art, they added. They still get people stopping in to look at the gallery “on their way to Door County”. But they also hear people who are pleasantly surprised at both the art and the good restaurants in the city.

People of Impact in Door County -- Stephanie Trenchard and Jeremy Popelka The Launch


Jeremy Popelka and Stephanie Trenchard have operated the Popelka Trenchard Fine Art Gallery on 2nd Avenue in Sturgeon Bay for 20 years. They do glass blowing, casting glass in sand molds, sculpture and painting. They have been invited to teach at the Corning Glass Museum and studio in Corning, NY and the have conducted glass making workshops in Thailand.

Now they are expanding in Sturgeon Bay by leasing a building just across Nebraska Street from their existing studio to create Project Launch: Artspace. It will offer rental space to fine artists, commercial artists, photographers and performance groups and become a part of the Steel Bridge Creative District, along with the Lockwood Gallery, the Holiday Music Motel and probably the Miller Art Museum.



“It will sort of be an incubator for the arts,” said Jeremy who plans to set up his own studio there for sculpture that doesn’t involve hot glass. Four people have already signed up to rent space.

“We are luxuriating in the space,’ he added. “It is rare to find any open warehouse space like this in Sturgeon Bay.” It could also serve as a venue for pop-up art shows, said Stephanie, who thinks it will provide substance for a creative district and encourage creative people to collaborate.

“We are not going to occupy the big space, although artists are welcome to rent it for short-term projects,” she said.

The building, probably from the 1930s, was probably built by the Army Corps of Engineers  and became part of the Peterson Builders shipbuilding complex and used for research and then storage.  During the 65 years of its existence, Peterson built about 300 boats and ships, mostly modest sized such as sub chasers, minesweepers, patrol boats for the U.S. Navy and other navies around the world, fishing boats, ferries and an aluminum sailboat for the Timken family, famed for their company’s ballbearings.

It was like the 4th of July every couple of months when a Navy boat was launched, said Jeremy, but people are kind of shocked when you talk about the Navy in Sturgeon Bay.

“They had a big old computer here with 250 phone lines.”

Friday, June 28, 2019

People of Impact in Door County -- Novel Bay Books


Officially, Novel Bay Booksellers in Sturgeon Bay opened July 15, 2018.

Unofficially it opened on July 5, 2018.  John Maggitti was unpacking books when he heard a rap on the window and a man gesturing to the door.

“I need a book,” he said. “I am trapped with those people."


He didn’t specify which people, but took a book from the top of the pile, The Cuban Affair by Nelson DeMille. Maggitti has a framed copy of the cover as a momento of the store’s first sale, a sale which launched the business and may also have saved a visitor’s sanity.

That opening schedule was pretty good, considering he and partner Liz Welter had only decided to open a bookstore on Memorial Day. They found a storefront on the sunny side of  Third Avenue between Draeb Jewelers and Audrey Off’s art and framing business.


John Maggitti and Liz Welter

Distributors told them it would take seven to 11 weeks to get books; they pushed for faster delivery and got a spreadsheet by email with 10,000 titles and a three-day deadline to choose. Two days later they sent it back with 3,100 selections, and they were on the way to the July opening.

They chose the New York Times bestsellers, Great American Reads from PBS, popular fiction, literary fiction, mysteries, current affairs, children’s books and Door County books.

“Our goal was to create a place that would foster community, where people could feel comfortable coming and reading,” said Liz, who had been writing for The Door County Advocate.

A year in, they say that about 35% of their inventory is curated by customers. The young adult books have been largely selected by middle school and high school students — if they bring in a list of recommended titles they get a free book.

Two mistakes, since corrected — not stocking westerns and romance novels. Surprising request — Christian romance novels that don’t have gratuitous sex.


In current events they aimed for political balance but soon found that readers skewed left of center and right of center books didn’t sell well (probably because right-wingers don’t read much — TG).

“We live, breathe and think books,” said John.

And displays — they move things around to keep it fresh, he added, crediting Liz with improving the ambiance after she left journalism to join the store full-time.

And that numbers support that, he added, saying the store turned profitable ahead of their projection.

John and mystery writer Patricia Skalka at her book signing for Death by the Bay

Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Miller Valentine Pop-Up -- If You Miss The Show Ask For The Catalog

The Miller Art Museum in Sturgeon Bay has a pop-up show of love-themed art that was to inspire love-themed songs at the Holiday Music Motel. You missed the music, which was Feb. 8 & 9 and you are in danger of missing the exhibit which closes Feb. 14.

But the next best thing is to see the binder of artists' statements, most with an image of their work.In the thumbnail on Don Cross’s page I saw new details in his beautiful, mysterious large color photo composite — his piece was prominently displayed at the front of the show. But light reflected off the glass  obscured some areas and I missed the full impact. After seeing his page I went back and looked closely at his work, entitled “love me…love me not.” It is great, and he has more of his own work and work by many other artists and crafts people across a wide range of prices at his Idea Gallery on County T in West Jacksonport.

It is heartening to see how many new artists have arrived in Door County, and how many resident artists continue to do great work.

Gretchen Anderson displays a metal print made in late afternoon sunlight, a haunting image entitled “Time” on her web site: www.expozedimages.com. It shows a friend after a tough chemo treatment, casting a shadow against a back wall, a hint of his impending death.

Ernest Beutel calls his “Ghost Face” image of a dog who was afraid of everything an exercise in abstract representationalism and announced that he is starting a new career as Beutel Art LLC.

Cody LaCrosse has an image of a deer in headlights seen through a windshield.  It’s “The Glowing Eyes Society wreaking havoc standing in the center stripe awaiting their prey.” As of September he has become a full-time wedding photographer but he also plans to do one photography project a year.

“Lineage of Love” by Niki Kafter shows three images of parents holding their children, going back to her great-great grandmother in 1888 and continuing through 2020 and 1952.

There’s more, but my notes ran short. If you are interested in some talent you may not have heard of before, ask for the pop-up show binder.

Greenbelt Towns From The New Deal -- Photos By Jason Reblando At The Miller Art Museum

When I saw the anouncement from the Miller Art Museum’s new curator, Lisa Shoshany of an exhibition of photographs of New Deal Greenbelt towns by Jason Reblando, I wasn’t enthused.

Sounded like an essay or a book, but not the material for a show in an art museum. That view was shared by a few friends who attended the opening.

“Boring,” said one.

“I don’t like to read art,” said another who prefers images that speak for themselves.

I was right — the material makes for a good book which is on sale at the museum for $45 and includes a few useful pages about how the Greenbelt towns were created by the federal governing in the 1930s under the presidency of Franklin Roosevelt. At a time when Door County Economic Development is pondering a study of housing needs in the county, this would be a useful show for business leaders.

But after spending time at the Miller over two visits, I think the photographs fully warranted a museum exhibition. The prints are big — 34 x 42 with frames — and they engage a viewer  emotionally, while the images in the book are more objects to study.

I like the size, which is a bit bigger than my own ink jet printer will produce. I don’t like photographers who make 5x7-inch prints in large mats and demand the viewer come close to see the precious object.

Reblando apparently agrees, as he wrote in an email to me:

“I like 30x40 inch prints because it's not too cost prohibitive to print at this size, and I have to take a step back from the work to view it. Granted, it doesn't seem very large compared to other contemporary photographers that you've probably seen, but to me, the 30x40 prints seems to fit this project well. Also, from a practical standpoint, if I were to print it any larger, I wouldn't be able to fit it in the back of my car. On the other end of the spectrum, I do enjoy the intimate feeling of the way it looks in a book-size format, too.”

An interview with The New Yorker writer Janet Malcolm led me to a critic she likes, Michael Fried, whose Amazon bio contains this bit of interesting observation about photography and print size:

"From the late 1970s onward, serious art photography began to be made at large scale and for the wall. Michael Fried argues that this immediately compelled photographers to grapple with issues centering on the relationship between the photograph and the viewer standing before it that until then had been the province only of painting. Fried further demonstrates that certain philosophically deep problems―associated with notions of  theatricality, literalness, and objecthood, and touching on the role of original intention in artistic production, first discussed in his contro­versial essay “Art and Objecthood” (1967)―have come to the fore once again in recent photography. This means that the photo­graphic 'ghetto' no longer exists; instead photography is at the cutting edge of contemporary art as never before."


Reblando's prints have stunning clarity. Turns out he shoot with 4x5 film and then uses high qulaity drum scans at a nonprofit photo center in Chicago called LATITUDE.

"The tech people working there are magical wizards," said Reblando, who has taught photography at  at Illinois State University, Columbia College Chicago, and DePaul University.

The Greenbelt towns were conceived under FDR at a time when the federal government was open to many experiments to get the country out of the Depression. They were meant to provide employment and affordable housing along with a sense of community to promote a more cooperative and egalitarian society. Homes ranged from single family to attached to apartment buildings. The towns had lots of open space including playing fields and easy access to nature with forests and lakes. Intersecting paths brought people together while a pedestrian/biking underpass below a local roadway showed positively Scandinavian focus on safe and healthy living. Predictably enough, the Greenbelt project was often condemned as communistic.

The photographer, who has an undergraduate degree in sociology, said his project was “an opportunity to engage with a unique expression of the New Deal as we continue to grapple with the complexities of housing, nature and governance in contemporary American life.”  He became interested in Greenbelt towns after shooting pictures of residents of public housing in Chicago.

"Government housing has its own history of success and failures." he said. "It's pretty shameful the way we treat people who need affordable housing."


Rablando said that residents of the Greenbelt towns told him they saw their communities in a new way after seeing the prints in an exhibition.

That makes sense. At their best, the photographs draw you in — my favorite is of converging, or perhaps diverging -- paths through a park with trees in the autumn. Roblando in this series is a photographer of calm, so while he does include some images of people standing, or boys straddling their bicycles, most are straightforward photographs of buildings, lakes, and stark interiors such as a microfiche reader with a black and white portrait of FDR on the wall behind it.

In the Greenbelt series A few glimpses of WPA artwork appear — a frieze in Maryland and distinctive mural above an otherwise bleak set of beige cabinets in the library in Ohio and an entire wall mural in a music room, also in Ohio.

He may be at his best with landscapes and buildings --a long (it extends beyond the side frames of the photo) three-story apartment building shot through trees that have shed most of their leaves onto an autumnal carpet in Maryland or a path leading through the woods to a partially visible house in Wisconsin or a bench swing in Maryland between looming shrubs which have grown untamed for years, provide a sense of the way planners mixed the man-made with nature.

In Gutter and Shadow he makes a foray into stark abstraction with a building’s dark uneven shadow cast across a lawn interrupted by a long white gutter designed to take water far from the foundation. 

The politics can’t go unremarked, Since the Reagan area, where a standard laugh line was “I’m from the government and I’m here to help you,” Republicans have harped on the idea that the government is always the problem, never the solution. Reblando’s photos of the Greenbelt towns created by the federal government show that it worked with the best intentions and often with great results to create housing and community.

Through Feb. 25

For more of his work see “Chicago Inside Out” in Places Journal. Here Reblando’s photography is paired with great reporting on Cook County, which is responsible for a lot of Chicago’s problems — prisons, hospitals — but is shortchanged by the state and federal governments. Some impressive leaders, including the sheriff and the prosecutor, are responding with imagination. His still pictures of government buildings and their interiors and a couple of wonderful portraits, work well with Maya Dukmasova’s writing.

“It was an exciting piece to work on as I enjoy working with writers with hopes that my images will complement the story,” Reblando said in an email. “I asked for feedback from the editor at Places and the journalist throughout the project to make sure I was on the right visual track. I hope there are more opportunities like this in the future.”

Reblando has also done photographs with the wet collodion process on tin types, taking pictures in  Pembroke Township, one of the poorest spots in the country. This requires coating the plates, inserting them into a film holder, taking the photograph and developing it immediately, which Reblando did using the trunk of his Corolla with a dark sheet clamped onto it. See the story from Chicago Magazine.

The process provoked some curiosity, which he could satisfy by showing people the pictures as he developed them. He did a similar set of images for the Oriental Institute at the University of Chicago and explained the process as it was caught on video.