Works On Paper 2022 Art Exhibit

I was thrilled to find out that two of my photographs were chosen to be included in this year’s Works On Paper exhibit at the Rosewood Gallery in Kettering. Bing Davis was the juror for the show. These two photographs are from my new series Latitude and Longitude. The two photographs are of the old Dayton Daily News building’s front door looking up and 5th street just west of the Neon Theater. I created photographs in downtown Dayton, trying to find beauty in plain sight. You can see these and many more from my Latitude and Longitude series on my website ClearyFineArtPhoto.com. On my website I show these photographs as posters with the name of the location as well as the GPS locations of each. The opening reception is scheduled for Saturday, February 5th, at 1 pm. Hope to see you all there.

New Business Photography For 2022

At the beginning of the year, I always receive calls from companies wanting to update their website with new photographs. Many times, I create pictures of their employees. I can come to a company’s location and set up my studio lighting and background. I can photograph everyone’s headshot without them leaving the office or losing any time away. I can also create group photos for webpage banners. While I’m onsite, many companies have me create editorial photographs for their website and other promotional material. These editorial photographs do better with SEO than pictures purchased from a stock photo website. I also have many landscape photographs of the Dayton region that can be used on a business website. These landscape photographs can also be framed and displayed in a company’s office. You can see more examples of my business photography at www.ClearyCreativePhoto.com. My landscape photography can be seen at www.ClearyFineArtPhoto.com.

Kettering Ohio Lincoln Park by Dan Cleary of Cleary Creative Photography
Sunrise photograph in Miami County Ohio by Dan Cleary of Cleary Creative Photography

Wright Brothers Anniversary of their 1st flight

Today 118 years ago, Orville and Wilbur Wright made four successful powered flights, 120 feet, 175 feet, 200 feet, and 852 feet. Unfortunately, after the fourth flight, a gust of wind overturned their machine, and it was damaged beyond repair. But they had created a lighter-than-air machine that flew under its own power. They packed everything up, came back to Dayton, built another machine, and in the summer of 1904, were learning how to be pilots at Huffman Prairie. As Orville wrote in his diary that day, “I got on the machine at 10:35 for the first trial. The wind, according to our anemometers at this time, was blowing a little over 20 miles. The machine lifted from the track just as it was entering the fourth rail. A sudden dart when a little over a hundred feet from the end of the track or a little over 120 feet from the point at which it rose into the air, ended the flight.” You can see more photographs from my series Wright Brothers: Then and Now at www.ClearyFineArtPhoto.com.

High School Senior Football Player Portraits

high school senior football player catching a football by Dan Cleary of Cleary Creative Photography
high school senior football player running outdoors by Dan Cleary of Cleary Creative Photography in Dayton, Ohio

I had a parent call me about photographing his son’s high school senior picture. The Dad’s comment was, “My son doesn’t want his high school senior portraits taken, but if he has to have them, then he wants them in a field while he runs and catches a football.” This high school senior is an all-state football player and has a scholarship to play football in college. I have experience with many high school senior boys who don’t want to be bothered to get professional portraits taken. I did some scouting and found an old football field that no one would bother us while creating the photographs. It was a cloudy day, so I set up two lights to add to the outdoor light. My job was not to let this young man think he was being photographed. We started with his Dad tossing a football to him, and I photographed the catches. He then broke out the weights, and I created a few more photographs. This high school senior boy was built, doing 40 lbs lifts with ease. Finally, his father threw him long passes, and he ran like the wind, making perfect catches. The funny part is he is a defensive back, so he doesn’t make that many catches unless he intercepts a pass from the opposing quarterback.  We finished the session with him in his college pullover. He was relaxed, and we got a few natural expressions that his mother and father liked very much. To get more information about Dan’s high school senior photography go to ClearyCreativePhoto.com/high-school-senior-portraits/

high school senior football player with a football outdoors by Dan Cleary of Cleary Creative Photography in Dayton, Ohio
high school senior football player catching a footbal outdoors by Dan Cleary of Cleary Creative Photography in Dayton, Ohio
high school senior football player lifting weights outdoors by Dan Cleary of Cleary Creative Photography in Dayton, Ohio
high school senior football player running outdoors by Dan Cleary of Cleary Creative Photography in Dayton, Ohio

Frank Cleary, WWII Veteran

My Dad's service during WWII in Patton's 3rd Army

Frank Cleary WWII metals case
Frank Cleary flying during WWII

Happy Memorial Day to everyone. This is the story of my Dad’s service during WWII. Frank Cleary was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1919. After graduating from Purcell Catholic High School, he took up photography. He cleaned out the old coal room in the family home and converted that space into a dark room where he processed black and white film and made prints. He attended college part-time and worked for the Wright Aeronautical Corporation as a male secretary. In 1940, the United States reinstated the military draft, and in 1941, Frank was drafted into the Army. He was eligible for a deferment because his company made airplane engines for the Army Air Corps, but as he said, “I had the fever and thought I had a duty to the country. Besides, it was only for a year.” He went to Fort Bragg, North Carolina for basic training and took his camera with him.

The attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, changed his enlistment timeline from one to four years. After basic training, he remained at Fort Bragg, where he worked as a secretary in the Colonel’s office. In the fall of 1942, he said “yes” to an offer to attend Officers’ Candidate School and was off to Fort Sill, Oklahoma. One day, shortly before leaving for Fort Sill, he laid his camera down and left the barracks for a few minutes. When he came back, the camera was gone.

In April 1943, Frank was commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant in the U.S. Army and transferred to the 128th Armored Artillery Battalion at Fort Cooke, California. His division was sent to Europe in 1944 and assigned to General Patton’s 3rd Army. He landed at Utah Beach just over a month after D-Day. No one in his division had yet been to war. His first assignment was as an Artillery Forward Observer in a tank. My Dad had no “forward observing” training. He didn’t know what to do and was scared. His tank was the first in line on the day they prepared to move into battle. He stood up with the top hatch open, watching below him as General Patton walked up to the Division Commander and said, “Your job is to take Brest,” and walked away. The fighting was intense, but my father returned unharmed.

Late in August 1944, Frank was transferred to the 212th Artillery Battalion to become an Air Forward Scout. The 212th had taken many casualties, and the man he was replacing had died in the line of duty. As an adult, he once told me, “At night in my prayers, I would ask, ‘Lord, what are you saving me for?’ That is why I would volunteer for missions. I knew I was saving someone else’s life because I knew I’d be OK.”

As an Air Forward Scout, he was part of an eight-man crew: two pilots, two observers, a sergeant, and three enlisted men. They were ahead of the Army and on their own. They would go up in the air in the morning and call in artillery strikes on the enemy positions. Much later in life, my Dad wrote a memoir of his time in the Army. It includes many of the photos he took and developed himself.

On December 11, 1944, five days before the Battle of the Bulge, his division received heavy shelling. He and his pilot, Lou Blumberg, jumped into their plane and went up looking for targets. They could approximate the enemy shells’ general direction, but the shelling would stop every time they would get within visual range. Lou and Frank decided to keep flying lower and lower over the enemy until someone fired on them. Finally, a German soldier fired his rifle at them. They pulled up and called in the artillery strike. He and his pilot received the Silver Star for Valor. In October 1945, he was honorably discharged from the Army and returned to Cincinnati, where he met and married my mother, and they started our family.

Wright Brothers: Then and Now videos

I made a series of short videos about how I created my Wright Brothers: Then and Now photographs. The six videos are from The Bike Shop, Kite Flying, Flight #41, Speed Test At Fort Myer, Horse drawn Carriages, and A New Kind Of Gull In New York Harbor. The video I’ve included here is Kite Flying which I took the photograph for at the National Park in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. You can see the all the how to videos at my website, www.ClearyFineArtPhoto.com. The book for this series will be available from my website soon. You can pre-order now for March delivery.

Wright Brothers: Then and Now book soon to be available

Front cover Wright Brothers- Then and Now book by Dan Cleary

I haven’t talked lately about the progress of my book Wright Brothers: Then and Now. Can I say, there are many details in producing a book! I’ve written the copy, had a copywriter rewrite the copy, rewrote the manuscript a few times again, had an editor go over the document, and maybe that part of the book will be finished this week. The publish-print date now is set for March. The introduction is about my Dad and how I got interested in photography. There are 27 Wright Brothers photographs taken from Dayton, Kitty Hawk, Washington DC, Detroit, New York, and France. You can see a full description at my web site, https://clearyfineartphoto.com/wright-brothers-then-and-now-book/. You can also order a copy of the book directly from the website. You can call me now if you like, 937-298-6776.

Frank Cleary standing by WWII plane in Wright Brothers book by Dan Cleary in Dayton Ohio
Horse Drawn Carriage photo in Wright Brothers book by Dan Cleary in Dayton Ohio

One Month Old Baby Boy and Three Month Old Baby Girl Portraits

3 moonth old baby girl with pink blanket and gray headband by Cleary Creative Photography in Dayton Ohio

      It turns out that even during the pandemic of this past year, people are still having babies. I had a couple of new people into the studio this week. Meet Alexandria or AJ for short. AJ came in because all her older sisters and brothers came in to have me, Mr. Dan, take their pictures. AJ has two older sisters, nine years and five years, and an older brother turning 3. She didn’t want to be left out from all the fun we have during our baby photography sessions and asked her Mom to bring her in as soon as she was old enough. My year-long baby photography plan typically starts with a three-month session when the babies can hold their heads up and smile. AJ was at that point and was excited to meet Mr. Dan. Her older sisters and brothers told her all about the fun they had. I can’t wait for the next nine months of photography and watching her grow.

1 month old baby boy with his Mom by Cleary Creative Photography in Dayton Ohio

      Jason was just one month old when he came in with his Mom, Dad, and older sister. Jason just moved here from California. His dad is in the Air Force and was transferred to Wright Patterson Air Force base. According to Jason’s older four-year-old sister, there wasn’t much for a kid to do at the dessert airbase Dad was last at and heard Dayton had great kids’ museums, parks, and schools. Jason wanted photographs with his Mom, Dad, and Sister because, as he put it, “you know, I’m not going to be this stinking cute forever!” He also wanted to see Mr. Dan for the whole year and asked his parents to sign up for the year-long Baby Photography Plan. In his case, a one-month portrait session, three months, six months, nine months, and a one-year baby portrait.

1 year old baby girl during smash cake with older brothers and sisters by Cleayr Creative Photography in Dayton Ohio

     What happens when you bring your older brothers and sisters to a smash cake session? They want to help. That’s what happened when Annabelle had her one-year portrait session as part of Mr. Dan’s Baby Photography Plan. It is a big cake for a one-year-old, and it would be a shame for all that extra cake to go to waste. The older kids were more than happy to help make the cake disappear.

      Mr. Dan with Cleary Creative Photography has photographed a few thousand babies in his career. Nothing thrills him more than to capture a precious baby smiling or doing something adorable and capturing it with a camera. Call Mr. Dan at 937-298-6776 or email him at Dan@ClearyPhoto.com, and he can tell you all about the baby photo plan.

 

Wright Brothers: Then and Now book

On this date, 117 years ago, Wilbur and Orville Wright made their historic first powered flights. Orville flew first, traveling 120 feet. Wilbur then flew 175 feet. In turn, Orville flew 200 feet, and Wilbur made the last flight of the day, going 800 feet. Their flight experiments had worked. Orville set up the Korona 5×7 glass plate view camera, and John Daniels took the famous photograph of the first flight. Daniels was a member of the U.S. Life-Saving Station and knew little about photography. His job was to compress a rubber bulb, forcing air through a tube that pushed the camera lens’s shutter release. Daniels didn’t remember squeezing the bulb. I am very familiar with this type of shutter release system, and I can imagine that when he saw the plane take off, he pressed the bulb instinctively. The Wrights knew that the shutter had been released but didn’t know if they had a photograph until months later when they processed the film in their home darkroom.
    I have spent the last four years traveling various locations where the Wright Brothers did their flight experiments and demonstrations. I’ve revisited the sites where the Wright Brothers did their early flight research and demonstrations to create modern images. These include many locations in Dayton, Ohio, Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, Washington, DC, Detroit, Michigan, Le Mans, and Pau, France. and New York City incorporated a retelling of early flight experiments.
    I have shown many of these photographs in the past four years, and given artist talks about the work. At the first artist talk, I was asked when will the book for this series be available? I am happy to announce that I will have the book Wright Brothers: Then and Now completed and ready for purchase in about two weeks. The bookstore at Carillon Park has ordered copies. The bookstore at the Air Force Museum is interested in putting it in their inventory. You can pre-order the book right now by emailing me at Dan@ClearyCreativePhoto.com or calling the studio at 937-298-6776. As soon as I have the book in my hands, it will be available for purchase from ClearyFineArtPhoto.com. There will be a couple of additional online sites soon, including Amazon.