Contact Information:
Dinah Satterwhite
PhotoImageArt
Bainbridge Island, WA
206-855-9002
Personal Website
DinahSatterwhite.com
Artist Statement:
Photographer Dinah Satterwhite was
always pushing the artistic
limits when it came to art and photography in school. As early as
1975, she decided to make up her own colors for a painting class,
and even
created her own imaginative names for them. In college she took a
few
photography classes and experimented with macro work, incorporating
the
results into multi-media productions.
Ms. Satterwhite has always felt driven to be a bit different from
the crowd, and enjoys pushing her own photography to new places.
After pursuing a career in marketing, advertising and hi-tech for
many years, she returned to focus more fully on her photography. In
1998 she researched the art of handcoloring black & white photos,
and fell in love
at first sight. She states that "this medium redefines the art of
photography, exploiting the dynamics of black and white film while
allowing me the artistic freedom to recreate the image."
Working with black & white and infrared films, she uses her creative
vision to compose and capture the subtlety of many subjects, and
then enhances them with a variety of handcoloring techniques.
Ms. Satterwhite feels that her "eye" is the most important element
in her work, and her technical abilities just back it up. She likes
high contrast images, and often changes the film, filters, or angle
of a shot to pick up a single element or texture.
Other techniques that Ms. Satterwhite has mastered include the
manipulation of 669 Polaroid film into lovely Image and Emulsion
Transfers. "The classic weathered look of an Image Transfer really
appeals to me, and the characteristic rough edges give the photos a
wonderful vintage look. The Emulsion Transfers provide a medium for
the wrinkling, tearing, and layering of the original Polaroid while
working underwater, and the result is a dynamic range of creative
combinations."
Another technique that she uses requires Polaroid
Time Zero film. These SX-70 Manipulations involve literally pushing
around the layers of film as they cure on the print, creating a
swirling or warbled abstract of the
original. Each of these processes require additional technical
abilities,
with a lot of room for creativity.
She often works in a studio in her waterfront home on Bainbridge
Island, complete with a very artistic garden and inspiring view of
the
harbor and Seattle skyline.
Dinah Satterwhite's images offer a beautiful vantage point of scenic
landscapes, and she enjoys photographing architecture, florals, and
classic cars. And her tinted images deliver the dream combination of
a
crisp photograph combined with glorious handcolored effects that set
her apart from other photographers.
Favorite Quote:
"Discovery consists in seeing what everybody has
seen and thinking what nobody has thought."
Albert Szent-Gyorgyi