ImageAvenue Photography: Blog https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog en-us (C) ImageAvenue Photography (ImageAvenue Photography) Mon, 15 Mar 2021 16:17:00 GMT Mon, 15 Mar 2021 16:17:00 GMT https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/img/s/v-12/u251574681-o69960543-50.jpg ImageAvenue Photography: Blog https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog 120 105 Ingrid & David Bellman https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2021/3/ingrid-david-bellman  

Welcome to a new photo project that follows the Musicians of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra at home during the COVID pandemic. I wanted to create photos of my friends in the Symphony to remind the public our ISO musicians have not performed onstage at Hilbert Circle Theatre since March 2020, and to relate the things they have been doing at home as they wait to perform for us again downtown. My goal is to inspire people to continue to support the musicians and orchestra through donations (Donation Page for the Musicians of the ISO Photo Project). I am also offering a portion of all sales of my photos and merchandise on this website to the musicians of the ISO. Please be sure to follow this blog to see each musician featured, and to follow the links to the gallery for more photos and options. If you'd like to book a photo session, please be sure to contact me, or use the Booking tab on the website.

In this together, Beckie

 

Ingrid Bellman (ISO Cello): “Last March, when we stopped playing with the orchestra because of the pandemic, I joined online classes studying Shakespeare’s plays. Together, David and I watched plays online , and David continued reading about Shakespeare in a book by Stephen Greenblatt, the professor who gave the lectures: Will in the World. When the weather warmed up we played numerous outdoor performances in neighborhoods around the city. We had a residency scheduled at TC Steele’s studio in Brown County, which we eventually got to perform in October with our colleagues, Jennifer Christen, Alistair Howlett, and Greg Martin. In the Summer ,I was invited by LiLi (ISO Viola) to teach cello and music appreciation in her music academy. The music appreciation classes were successful and we continued them in the winter and the spring. David provides technical assistance since all is done via zoom. Having extra time helped me to learn patience and I joined the trend of baking sourdough bread, and I use giant mittens to protect my hands! Most of my teaching is done online but I do have beginner students come to our garage, where I keep a space heater to keep it warm. Recently I joined a program giving cello classes to two students in Israel. I get to speak Hebrew and enjoy the collaboration with the teachers and their gifted students. I will be retiring from the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra at the end of March. It was a wonderful long career! I have learned a lot and have enjoyed the marvelous sounds that have surrounded me all these years. I will miss it very much. However I will continue playing and teaching.”

And from David Bellman (retired ISO Principal Clarinet): “This past year (it’s almost a full year at this point) has been quite a rollercoaster ride for so many of us and I am no exception. The very beginning was such a jarring experience: we played two rehearsals of a Mahler Symphony on Thursday (which had not been very enjoyable rehearsals from a personal point of view) and suddenly that evening, we were told that the concerts on Friday and Saturday would not take place because of orders from the Governor to curtail such public events as Indiana and the whole country descended into the coronavirus Pandemic. As it has turned out, those were my last notes ever on the Hilbert Circle Theatre Stage as Principal Clarinet of the ISO since I entered retirement as of September, 2020. During the following weeks and months, just about all activities and routines to which we had become accustomed were turned upside down. As we all adjusted to the “new normal,” (and we still adjust today!) here are some of the highlights of my year in the time of COVID-19.

1. To practice or not to practice? I have played my clarinet almost every day with some exceptions. Uncertain at first as to when the orchestra might re-start performing, it felt like the right thing to do to “stay in shape.” I practiced some new repertoire that there never had been time for during a busy orchestra season. I have even learned some rudimentary video editing skills as we have been called upon to produce videos of our playing for various purposes, both for the ISO and for other purposes. Throughout the late spring and summer and into the early fall of 2020, I participated in a number of informal “driveway” and “cul-de-sac” concerts, bringing music to very appreciative audiences who were often very generous in making contributions to the ISO, directly to the musicians, or in some cases to benefit a charitable cause. I and my friends, colleagues, and of course my wife, Ingrid, very much enjoyed being able to make music even though our beloved ISO was temporarily silenced.  

2. How do we teach private lessons? Like so many colleagues, I have maintained some private students and I also teach clarinet at the University of Indianapolis. The Zoom platform started out a bit rough for musical use, but it continues to evolve and improve over time. 

3. When the weather became warmer, I was able to enjoy one of my favorite activities: bicycling! I took many long rides on my own and a few with friends throughout the spring summer and fall. Even during the winter, we have had some warm enough weather to ride outdoors. I’m very much looking forward to more frequent rides as spring rapidly approaches. In the meantime, long walks with our dog (Leona), and time on our home elliptical cross-trainer account for the majority of my physical activity.

4. I’ve been grateful for the time to do more reading and also to view more movies than during a typical busy season with the orchestra. Shakespeare has been a theme for many months—I watched a few Shakespeare plays with Ingrid, as she took a few online courses about the playwright; also, I have been reading “Will in the World,” a Shakespeare biography written by one of the teachers of Ingrid’s courses, Stephen Greenblatt. Mr. Greenblatt has done an amazing job of showing “how Shakespeare became Shakespeare.” I also enjoy listening to radio programs and podcasts. I told my daughter that I guess I’m a bit old-fashioned listening to so much radio, and not much television. She told me that actually, frequent radio listening was very popular among “Millennials.” So I guess I’m modern and hip after all!

5. I feel very lucky to have a partner to live with at home, my wife Ingrid, an ISO cellist. I think that living alone during this pandemic would be so difficult. We are so lucky to have the technology which makes it possible to so easily speak via telephone or Zoom or Skype with almost anyone, the world over.  And I do enjoy frequent telephone conversations with good friends and with our daughter, Lilly, who lives in California. Nothing can replace in-person social interactions, and these are so greatly reduced with our current situation. But we have had some opportunities to take walks with friends (socially-distanced and masked of course), whether simply in our neighborhoods or even in a park. I am grateful for these occasional treats to break the isolation mandated by the coronavirus. Now that both Ingrid and I have received our COVID vaccinations, we eagerly await our upcoming trip to California in May to visit Lilly and her husband, Tim. This will be our first time being together with them in more than a year-and-a-half.

6. I have always thought that I would try to get involved in more volunteerism when I retired. Right now, it’s a bit tricky to find safe ways to become involved in good causes. But I have joined a group at our Synagogue which advocates for better tenants’ rights and is particularly concerned with the major problem that our city has with a very large number of evictions. This is a particularly important issue during this pandemic when so many have lost livelihoods and income and are vulnerable to losing their homes as a result. I also try to donate blood occasionally.

7. I had quite an adventure traveling to Thiells, New York just before Thanksgiving in order to attend to the affairs and belongings of my older brother who had passed away in August. I flew there, wearing my N95 mask, and after spending almost two weeks there clearing out his apartment and sorting through all his belongings, I rented a mid-sized SUV and drove home with many of his things, including six guitars and a number of pieces of electronic equipment used by my brother who was a guitarist and composer. This was quite an eventful and emotional trip. I felt very lucky to arrive home safely and healthy after experiencing some less than “safe” situations during my voyage. I intend to learn to play the guitar now that I have some beautiful instruments at my disposal. Unfortunately, I have not yet begun this learning, but I think that it will be a perfect activity for pandemic living and for retirement in general.

I did bake one loaf of “Amish Friendship” bread during these last several months, which was an interesting learning experience and a first for me. Ingrid, however who is a much better baker and cook than I, has taken over the bread baking. I still get to enjoy eating it however!

I must confess that I spend more time sleeping than I used to. I suppose that this is my escape from our current reality. We worry and empathize very much about our furloughed friends and colleagues and the many millions of unemployed. The incomprehensible loss of life and health of so many the world over is so tragic. I know that we are all faced with this sadness and anxiety, and I am not at all alone in experiencing these feelings and emotions. But when writing about my life and activities during this time of COVID, it would seem almost dishonest to omit the pervasive sadness and worry that affects us all. I’m definitely enjoying the sensation of seeing the proverbial “light at the end of the tunnel” becoming just a bit brighter and clearer every passing day (especially knowing that the ISO is returning to the stage in the Spring and that a full season is planned for 2021 – ’22).”

Click on the above photos to visit the gallery for more photos.

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(ImageAvenue Photography) https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2021/3/ingrid-david-bellman Mon, 15 Mar 2021 16:13:42 GMT
Stephen Hawkey https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2021/3/stephen-hawkey

Welcome to a new photo project that follows the Musicians of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra at home during the COVID pandemic. I wanted to create photos of my friends in the Symphony to remind the public our ISO musicians have not performed onstage at Hilbert Circle Theatre since March 2020, and to relate the things they have been doing at home as they wait to perform for us again downtown. My goal is to inspire people to continue to support the musicians and orchestra through donations (Donation Page for the Musicians of the ISO Photo Project). I am also offering a portion of all sales of my photos and merchandise on this website to the musicians of the ISO. Please be sure to follow this blog to see each musician featured, and to follow the links to the gallery for more photos and options. If you'd like to book a photo session, please be sure to contact me, or use the Booking tab on the website.

In this together, Beckie

 

Stephen Hawkey (ISO Cellist) offers these insights into the past 12 months of away from the stage: "It’s crazy to think that it’s been well over a year since I was last on the stage of Hilbert Circle Theatre—for my audition way back in November of 2019! I was scheduled to start with the ISO in May after I graduated with my master’s degree, but of course concerts were canceled due to COVID-19 and I never had the chance to perform with the orchestra. After spending some time with family in the Carolinas during the summer of 2020, I decided to move to Indianapolis to try to get to know some of my new colleagues and perform smaller concerts as they came up. Thanks to many wonderful ISO colleagues (Amy Kniffen, Terry Langdon, and Peter Vickery to name a few), I’ve been able to perform in dozens of chamber concerts around the city. Apart from music, I’ve stayed busy by spending time with my orange tabby Simba (six months old), playing tennis/running, some Xbox gaming, and if a friend comes over, playing some foosball thanks to a table gifted to me by ISO colleague Jennifer Farquhar. It’s been difficult to not be performing with the ISO as planned, but it has been truly rewarding to meet so many wonderful people here, and I can’t wait to get on stage!
 

Click on the photo to visit the gallery for more photos.

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(ImageAvenue Photography) https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2021/3/stephen-hawkey Fri, 12 Mar 2021 15:39:24 GMT
Amy & Tony Kniffen https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2021/3/amy-tony-kniffen

Welcome to a new photo project that follows the Musicians of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra at home during the COVID pandemic. I wanted to create photos of my friends in the Symphony to remind the public our ISO musicians have not performed onstage at Hilbert Circle Theatre since March 2020, and to relate the things they have been doing at home as they wait to perform for us again downtown. My goal is to inspire people to continue to support the musicians and orchestra through donations (Donation Page for the Musicians of the ISO Photo Project). I am also offering a portion of all sales of my photos and merchandise on this website to the musicians of the ISO. Please be sure to follow this blog to see each musician featured, and to follow the links to the gallery for more photos and options. If you'd like to book a photo session, please be sure to contact me, or use the Booking tab on the website.

In this together, Beckie

 

Amy Kniffen (ISO Acting Associate Principal Viola) and Tony Kniffen (ISO Principal Tuba), and their children, have been involved with many projects around their home during this past year. As Amy writes: "Our many covid projects included refinishing a sewing table that was gifted from a neighbor to support the sewing machine we were given by our "auntie", for the girls who were t
aught to sew by Anne Perry. Several other pieces of furniture were refinished, 20K pounds of dirt were moved, 3 stone walls were rebuilt, 5 trees were chopped into firewood, a parking space was paved with stone, the girls learned to Rollerblade and I Marie Kondo'd the house. The kids were wrangled, we hiked many state parks and watched a lot of movies."

 

Click on the photo to visit the gallery for more photos.

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(ImageAvenue Photography) https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2021/3/amy-tony-kniffen Wed, 10 Mar 2021 15:31:59 GMT
Foggy Morning https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/12/foggy-morning

It was a very foggy morning on the campus of Butler University, with Holcomb Observatory and Planetarium barely visible in the background.

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(ImageAvenue Photography) https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/12/foggy-morning Sat, 05 Dec 2015 18:44:50 GMT
IMPD at Final Four https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/4/impd-at-final-four IMPDIMPD

Stopped to grab a photo of these IMPD officers working hard while biking around town during the Final Four.

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(ImageAvenue Photography) https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/4/impd-at-final-four Mon, 06 Apr 2015 17:02:39 GMT
Wisconsin Badger Fans at Final Four https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/4/wisconsin-badger-fans-at-final-four

We spent a lot of time at Lucas Oil Stadium before the semi-final games. The Wisconsin Badger fans seemed to be the ones that stood out the most.

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(ImageAvenue Photography) https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/4/wisconsin-badger-fans-at-final-four Sun, 05 Apr 2015 02:40:13 GMT
Badgers https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/4/badgers

We met several Wisconsin Badger fans today in town for their Final Four game against the Kentucky Wildcats. These fans were on Mass Ave. before heading to Lucas Oil Stadium.

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(ImageAvenue Photography) https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/4/badgers Sun, 05 Apr 2015 02:31:39 GMT
Mark & Oliver #LoveIndy https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/4/mark-oliver-loveindy Mark and his dog, Oliver, paused for a photo at the #LoveIndy photo spot today after we were able to shoot some photos of Oliver for the "Tails of the Monon" blog.

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(ImageAvenue Photography) https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/4/mark-oliver-loveindy Sat, 04 Apr 2015 00:24:57 GMT
#LoveIndy Campaign Day Two https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/4/-loveindy-campaign-again While we were waiting for our own violin to be worked on at Indianapolis Violins today (and working on the "Tails of the Monon" website), we met world-renowned electric violinist, Cathy Morris. We were able to capture this photo of her as the "I" in the Indy sign for the #LoveIndy campaign.

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(ImageAvenue Photography) https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/4/-loveindy-campaign-again Thu, 02 Apr 2015 20:00:13 GMT
#LoveIndy Campaign https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/4/-loveindy-campaign Zeke and Chandler stopped to let us shoot a few photos of them today while we were out working on the "Tails of the Monon" blog. We were able to capture this great photo of the two of them as the "I" in Indy for the #LoveIndy campaign that launched March 31st. Be sure to read about Zeke at: http://tailsofthemonon.com/2015/04/01/zeke/.

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(ImageAvenue Photography) https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/4/-loveindy-campaign Wed, 01 Apr 2015 20:32:08 GMT
Butler University Bulldog Jog https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/3/butler-university-bulldog-jog

Stopped by for the 23rd Butler University Bulldog Jog today, a 3.5-mile Run/Walk, and met a lot of great participants!

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(ImageAvenue Photography) https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/3/butler-university-bulldog-jog Sat, 28 Mar 2015 15:39:22 GMT
Cold Day on the Monon Trail https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/3/cold-day-on-the-monon-trail

It was a cold day on the Monon Trail today while we were out looking for dogs to feature on Tails of the Monon from Carmel and Westfield.

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(ImageAvenue Photography) https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/3/cold-day-on-the-monon-trail Sat, 28 Mar 2015 00:48:28 GMT
Tails of The Monon https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/3/tails-of-the-monon

Welcome to "Tails Of The Monon;" a blog dedicated to our four-legged friends using the Monon Trail every day. The wonder of the dog, and the humans who accompany them along the 18-plus mile trail from downtown Indianapolis to Carmel, Indiana, is a delight to each of us documenting them here. "Tails Of The Monon" was born out of our trips to the Monon Trail and wondering how many different breeds of dogs we might see each time we were there. Trying to guess the story of each dog, led us to ask if we could photograph the dogs and add a little information for each one. We hope you enjoy the "Tails Of The Monon" blog! (www.tailsofthemonon.com)


 

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(ImageAvenue Photography) https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/3/tails-of-the-monon Wed, 18 Mar 2015 15:19:49 GMT
HCT Seussical Show https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/3/hct-seussical-show  

The Hendricks County production of Seussical is in its final weekend March 13-15. We were able to photograph the show twice and have added several of the photos to the website. The talent level, costumes and sets are fantastic and is really worth a trip to Hendricks County to see.

 

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(ImageAvenue Photography) https://www.imageavenuephotography.com/blog/2015/3/hct-seussical-show Fri, 13 Mar 2015 20:23:19 GMT