Messages from a Spirit Photographer

She’s the first “Spirit Photographer” I’ve ever met.

Karen Leffler embraces art and spirit – which makes her the most fitting person for ArtSpirit7 to write about.

Karen Leffler, Spirit Photographer
Karen Leffler, spirit photographer

“As my life is a prayer, photography is my passion.” says Leffler. As you can see from her website, she specializes in sacred photography and architecture.

A few months ago Leffler gave a presentation at the California Institute of Integral Studies. She spoke about her experience as the official photographer for Casa de Dom Inacio in Abadiania, Brazil and of John God events around the globe.

Her photographs catch the presence of other-ness, something unexpected and unseen by the naked eye that appears in her photographs. It is hard to describe in words.

Leffler showed photographs of the life of João Teixeira de Faria, internationally known as John of God or João de Deus. He is “arguably the most powerful unconscious medium alive today and possibly the best-known healer of the past 2000 years.” (from johnofgod.com)

The prevalent thread in Leffler’s presentation is what we focus on is what we manifest. Whatever imagery we allow our eyes to gaze upon is like a prayer to the Universe of what we want. So guard the door to your precious eyes and select carefully.

Of course at Casa de Dom Inacio they are very careful about what is on their walls.

Before her talk was over she suggested a few websites to visit:

Gregg Braden talking about our hearts as our biggest electromagnetic field;

-the work of Dr. William Kent Larkin and the Applied Neuroscience Institute (watch the video about the up spiral and the emotional gym if you can); and

Mellen-Thomas Benedict who shares his inspirational message. Benedict “died” for an hour and a half and returned to his body.

You can read more about Leffler and her experiences in a book she produced with Heather Cumming titled John of God: The Brazilian Healer Who’s Touched the Lives of Millions and published by Simon and Schuster.

How does the art on your walls make you feel?

3 Reasons Letterpress Lives On

“Hatch Show Print takes me back to my early performance days. Lots of those great traditions have been lost, but I’m happy to see that Hatch still lives on.” – B.B. King, blues musician

If you need the name of a print shop to identify with letterpress Hatch Show Print (“HSP”), is the place. Established in 1879, it is one of the oldest letterpress shops in the United States and one of the reasons letterpress lives on.

“Advertising without posters is like fishing without worms.” – The Hatch Brothers

Over a hundred years ago this Nashville treasure produced posters for vaudeville, circus, and minstrel shows. Since then they’ve become part of the Country Music Hall of Fame and produced posters for Elvis Presley, Bruce Springsteen, Emmylou Harris, and ColdPlay and many more. Check out a book about Hatch Show Print on Amazon.

For more about Hatch Show Print check out The Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service’s story on American Letterpress.

The second reason letterpress lives on is its tactile appeal. In this age of slick advertisements printed on glossy stock, letterpress embraces the look and feel of paper with grain and satisfies the human sensitivity to texture.

You can feel the debossing of the paper. Letterpress shops like Boxcar Press in Syracuse, NY embrace these techniques.

The third reason letterpress lives on is the use of the photopolymer plate. A line drawing can be photo-imaged to make it’s reverse image on film which is then burned onto a photopolymer plate. This process is described quite well in the Three Red Hens blog.

In a video under two minutes Matthew Wengerd of A Fine Press and Swan City Press shares a little about photopolymer plates.

Cody Langford of It’s Fancy Letterpress Studio in Missouri, shows the actual step-by-step process in his Youtube video.

It’s not accident that the resurgence vinyl records, slient movies, and letterpress are overlapping. We’re discovering all sorts of ways to take a break from the “high technology intoxication zone” (a term coined by author and social forecaster John Naisbitt), aren’t we?

Celebrating Cameraless Art

Have you experimented with creating art on your scanner? Wikipedia calls it scanography. I call them scanograms or Gow-o-grams.

It’s fun and an opportunity to play with the elements of composition. In celebration of Valentine’s energy all year long I created the scanogram below. Spread the love. Add to or play with the Light!

Heart Song
"Heart Song," scanogram by Mary Gow

You can see some other examples in this series:
Gow-o-gram No. 2
4 Quotes to Jumpstart Your Dreams
5 People to Have on Your Personal Board of Directors

For the Love of Letterpress

There’s a letterpress revivial going on! Technology journalist, Glenn Fleishman, covers a brief history of printing and shows how modern technology is assisting in reviving an old art form. This YouTube Video was produced by Boot Strapper Sudios in Seattle.

“It’s real, there’s ink, there’s an impression. . . you have a great experience that’s a physical expression,” said Fleishman.

Letterpress printing is relief printing of text and image using a press with a “type-high bed” printing press and movable type, in which a reversed, raised surface is inked and then pressed into a sheet of paper to obtain a positive right-reading image. (Wikipedia)

If you take a class in letterpress you may find it’s the perfect panacea for an artist’s tendency to lose focus. In fact every drawer of type is rigorously organized in a specific fashion so every upper and lower case character, has its specific place.

Don’t miss the new movie about letterpress, called Linotype: In Search of the Eighth Wonder of the World. It is playing in San Francisco February 21. Check out whether it is showing showing near you.

For the love of letterpress visit Love Letterpress/, Dolce Press, and Peace Love Letterpress

Happy Valentine’s to the printed word.