Date: Fri 02-May-1997
Date: Fri 02-May-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Illustration: I
Location: A9
Quick Words:
Halfmann-Miklus-photography
Full Text:
(feature on photographer Carol Halfmann Miklus, 5/2/97)
New Photography Exhibition Opens Sunday-
A Childhood Interest Developed Into A Lifelong Passion
(with photos)
BY SHANNON HICKS
Photography is a competitive field. Understandably, shutterbugs can be very
tight-lipped about sharing their secrets in creating their work, but there is
one thing most photographers will talk about and agree on: Once you pick up a
camera and start seeing all possibilities, photography is a constant learning
experience. There are so many variables in the discipline, it can take a
lifetime to learn everything, or just as long to fully develop an area of
expertise.
Not only are there the different films (color, black-and-white, slide), but
the processes used to develop the film from the moment of clicking the shutter
on a camera are so varied, one single view through a camera's lens can be
manipulated and depicted 100 different ways.
Carol Halfmann Miklus knows - and fully enjoys - the feeling of working with
and manipulating photographic images. A self-taught photographer, Carol was
bitten by the camera bug at an early age and has been satisfying the itch ever
since.
Her specialty is black-and-white photography, hand-colored infrared works and
Polaroid image transfers. Recent images include striking infrared landscapes
and captivating hand-colored images of flowers.
For the infrareds, Carol uses a mishmash of materials to pull out color:
pencils, oils, pastels, inks.
"It really varies on what the image is," she explained. "Pencils give you more
control; ink offers a hint of color."
Carol has had shows at Waveny Carriage House in New Canaan; Shoreline Alliance
in Guilford; and at Westport Nature Center. She also had pieces in the 1995
New England Camera Council show at Amherst College. This summer she is
scheduled to be in a show at Gallery 13 in Danbury.
In the immediate future, however, is an exhibition of Carol's works, entitled
"All Around Us," which will open at McLaughlin Vineyards in Sandy Hook on
Sunday afternoon. Offering viewers a look at Carol's most recent new works,
the show will hang through the end of the month. Carol sat down recently with
Morgen McLaughlin, manager of the vineyards, to decide on the final selection
of prints to be exhibited in the show.
"I like her use of black and white, and how she colors in the flowers," Ms
McLaughlin said this week. "I like that they're natural landscapes, and that
seems to tie in with the rustic, country setting we have here.
"I think she has great work."
Carol's images are immediately eye-catching. The details are striking. In a
recent show of her works at Dr Java's in Bethel, Carol had a number of works
depicting area scenes, which were recognizable to many viewers. She also
presented a series of pieces joined by their theme of coffee. The show was a
culmination of two years' work. And it was a great success.
Jim DiLillo, who organizes Dr Java exhibitions, called the show a hit.
"It was beautiful work. We had a very positive reaction from customers," Mr
DiLillo said. "She did very well; she sold a lot of pieces.
"Hers was one of our best shows from the photography point of view," he
continued. "We don't do many photography shows, but her colored pieces were a
big hit."
Carol's exhibition in Bethel was originally scheduled to run for four weeks;
it ran for two months.
"Photography is a major addiction - I'm like a sponge, I can't get enough!"
Carol said recently. Seated in the airy livingroom of her home, Carol was
surrounded by framed images she has done. While Carol's works are on many
walls, it is not an ostentatious display. On the contrary, with the works
fairly small in size and numbers, her pieces are eye-catching, very
attractive, and not in the least bit overbearing in their presentation.
She and her husband, Ken, live in Newtown near the Newtown-Monroe border. Both
work at SVG Lithography in Wilton. Originally part of Perkin-Elmer, where
Carol used to work, SVGL makes the tools that imprint wafers for computer
chips.
Carol began working with SVGL last June as senior technical writer, but her
visual aptitude soon became clear to her superiors. Within a month of being
hired, she became the division's media coordinator. In that capacity, she
creates videos for educating customers and service technicians' training.
Duties have also come to include taking photographs for the company's manuals
and service documentation.
That is her day job. Photography is her second job. And next to husband Ken,
it is also her biggest passion.
An Immediate Attraction
Growing up in West Haven, Carol took up photography at an early age. Her
father bought a 126 Instamatic camera for her when she was about seven years
old. She took it with her on a Girl Scout camping trip and, she says, "That
was it. I was hooked."
When she got back from the camping trip, she talked her father into teaching
her how to use his 2¬ Yoshika. Within a year she was playing with her own 35
mm camera.
One of her neighbors was also a photography buff, who also happened to have a
basement darkroom. That was where Carol learned about processing film, when
she was about 12 years old.
"We'd go out schlepping and shooting, and then come back and spend the
afternoon in the darkroom," she said. "That was my first case of darkroom
work, and that was fun.
"We went through all of the sunset scenes and all of the beach scenes, because
we were right by the water. We went through all of that - in the winter, in
the summer."
Staying with the 35 mm format, Carol continued learning about photography in
high school. By this time she had her own darkroom.
When her course load got too heavy during college, she eased up on the
photography. Taking classes from 8 in the morning until 11 at night, and
working as an intern at Milford Hospital during her final year of school meant
putting the lens cap on the camera for quite a while. Along the way, Carol
earned a bachelor's degree in chemistry from the University of New Haven, and
then a mid-tech from Housatonic.
Once life settled down a little, a few years after graduating college, one of
Carol's friends knew of someone in the commercial photography business who was
selling large format equipment. Carol not only got the equipment at a great
price, but also spent a few weekends at the photographer's studio, getting a
crash course in different lighting techniques before the photographer moved
out to California.
Photography was put on the back burner again a few months later. When working
at the hospital was getting too tough, Carol took another job, this time at a
lab in New Haven. The hours were a little better, but the pay was "not great,"
she says. Plus there was the rent for her apartment to contend with, and
payments on a new car.
"Unfortunately, I made a major mistake," she said. "I sold my large format
camera, and all its accoutrements. I sold my enlarger.
"I could cry over that, but it's OK. I needed the money at the time."
Eventually, Carol ended up working at Perkin-Elmer, taking a job during the
summer of 1984. Six years later, while she was working in customer training,
she met her future husband (who was doing training for service engineers). The
training department was sent to a week-long off-site communications building
event.
"We had assigned seating, and I `got stuck' sitting next to Ken for two
days...," she starts to smile. About a month later, Carol returned to take a
service class, and Ken was there. Again, the smile.
"And that was it. We went to lunch." Things fell quickly into place, and soon
Carol and Ken were engaged to be married.
Which also led to the reason Carol returned to photography in earnest.
"Because we were getting married, that's the reason I got back into
photography so intensely," confided Carol. While organizing her wedding, Carol
found the photography was one of the most important parts of the day for her
("Other than where it was going to be and that the food was OK, that was the
most important thing to me.").
"I had seen so many people who had gotten married and just had these not
really exceptional pictures," she explained. "Too many `There's Aunt Millie,
there's Uncle Joe, here's a table shot, and oh look, here's somebody
dancing.'" The bride-to-be knew she wanted something that would really capture
the emotions of the day, while also being somewhat artistic. So she and Ken
went looking for a photographer to fit within that parameter.
"Ken was so good. He came with me to all the interviews, and we went to a lot
," she laughed. "I can't tell you how many people I dragged that poor guy to.
Everyone within a 100-mile radius." Which was how Carol met Brookfield
photographer Laurie Klein.
While Carol and Ken eventually settled on a different photographer for their
wedding - Ms Klein's work "is awesome," Carol says, but her services proved
cost-prohibitive - Carol returned to Brookfield a few weeks after the
honeymoon to take a class with Ms Klein and Jennifer Nash.
The students who took that class four years ago, along with Ms Nash, has now
turned into a regular group that meets weekly to share ideas, try new
techniques, and encourage each other. Carol has taken a few more classes with
Ms Klein, including her hand coloring, image transfer and emulsion transfer
classes.
A Sense Of Intimacy
Today, Carol also does wedding photography on the side, and her sense of
capturing a special moment is seen in every image she produces. Her photos of
a couple's big day are not your typical walking-down-the-aisle, bridal party
and groomsmen photos.
Carol's wedding photographs are a little more intimate in nature. A look
through her portfolio reveals images of a bride and her mother, still at home
the morning of the ceremony.
Another photo from the same day has zoomed in on the hands of the bride and
groom during the ceremony. It is during the ceremony, and the couple is
holding hands.
On the lighter side - because weddings are both serious affairs as well as
celebrations - Carol shot off three quick frames during the ceremony where the
groomsmen are sitting in the front pew, trying to hide their smiles and not
laugh, but Carol nevertheless caught them laughing mischievously.
"This was during the ceremony and the minister was being very serious," Carol
explained. "Something happened within that group and they were laughing, but
trying not to." It is a great series of shots; a viewer feels as if they were
at the wedding, part of the party, when seeing something like this, the kind
of thing that makes each wedding an individual event. That is what Carol
strives for.
The importance of getting closer to a wedding party when working as a
photographer was something Carol came to understand when she and Ken were
planning their own wedding a few years ago.
"With weddings, I just think it is so nice to be able to look at your pictures
and remember exactly what you were thinking," she said. "The emotions of the
day are so important. I like the photos to be more artistic than
documentative."
Carol is able to infuse her own feelings into her work when she is creating
pieces for herself. She can also add a personal touch to works she does for
others.
When viewers look at her photography, regardless of whether or not they
understand how the images have been produced, Carol Miklus' views are so
captivating, the works speak for themselves.
