Form submitted successfully, thank you.

Error submitting form, please try again.

Seeded Earth Studio bio picture

Bio






My grandmother gave me a Brownie camera when I was eight
years old, then proudly showed my photographs of her flowers to her Garden
Society. The joy I felt as a young child while taking photographs for others to
enjoy remains today, and it is this passion that keeps me immersed in
photography.


My husband and I moved to Wisconsin in the mid-1970s and,
on impulse, I borrowed a Pentax K-1000 to take my first photography course. I
later attended the Madison Area Technical College and Edgewood University in Madison
where I took both art and photography classes.


In 2007, I received a digital camera as a gift and the door
to photography opened wider than ever. My world shifted as I saw the
possibilities that could be created using a camera and lenses — infinite possibilities
to document the natural world, architecture, history, seeing everything with a
new perspective.


"Even the smallest of details became intensely
interesting. Maybe that's why I love photography. I try to capture what I see,
my own interpretation, not what someone else might see."


I also became a contributor to WisconsinNative.com, writing
and photographing for both the Wandering Wisconsin
and Travel Green
features on the travel website through December, 2008. My photography has also
been published in regional magazines, national travel guides, and in a book on
Functional Architecture which was published in London in 2009.


Though I shoot in many genres, I most love the experience
of photographing the natural world. Nature grounds me. I can be myself  --
in the forest, the mountains, the desert, or the prairie -- in solitude with
nature.


My hobby is now a career, as I write and photograph as a
freelancer as the principal of Seeded Earth Studio, LLC.

 

Bo Mackison

Seeded Earth Studio LLC

Madison, Wisconsin

Ocotillo

Moody Desert in Black and White

Moody Desert in Black and White

Candle Wood, Coach Whip, Flaming Sword, Jacob’s Staff, Slim Wood, Vine Cactus - all are various names for the Ocotillo cactus. Found only in the Sonoran desert in the Southwest United States and adjacent Mexico, it is a practical plant. Its branches, covered with spiky thorns, makes a naturally effective fence. Those thorns are sharp, nothing to be reckoned with.

by Bo Mackison

6 comments

oneshotbeyond - gorgeous in every way!02/10/2010 - 11:09 am

Montucky - They are beautiful plants! WIll you be there to see them bloom? Should start in March after such a wet winter. I like the mood of that photo!02/10/2010 - 7:45 pm

Molly - Love how this looks like a drawing, awesome shot. Although, they don't sound like something to mess with, no. Haha.02/10/2010 - 10:57 pm

Anna - Lovely in its spike-ness and the lines as the b&w really shows this image off.02/11/2010 - 12:14 pm

QuinnCreative - The contrast between the soft, streaky sky and the spiky, thorny ocotillo is wonderful!02/12/2010 - 9:42 am

Gandalf - A very striking composition02/15/2010 - 9:01 am

Your email is never published or shared. Required fields are marked *

*

*