A few visuals of the Air France Concorde on display in the Boeing Aviation Hangar at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Virginia. This annex of the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum is located at the Washington Dulles International Airport.
Sep 30, 2019
Concorde at the National Air and Space Museum
Catalogue:
Images
,
Middle America Series
,
Museum
,
Northeast USA 2019
,
Photography
,
Planes
,
Virginia
,
Washington DC
Sep 29, 2019
Autumn Scenes in Medicine Hat, Alberta
Catalogue:
Alberta
,
Around the Hat Series
,
Churches
,
Images
,
Medicine Hat
,
Medicine Hat Photographer
,
Photography
Location:
Medicine Hat, AB, Canada
Sep 27, 2019
New Artwork in Medicine Hat, Alberta
This week saw the finishing touches on 40+ of my original art prints installed at the newly constructed Stringam Law Office in Medicine Hat, Alberta.
From a variety of framed images to custom large scale canvases, this curated collection featuring local scenes, landmarks, and courthouse details from my Around the Hat series was one of the final elements installed to complete this amazing space.
Thank you to Stringam in Medicine Hat for reaching out and for collaborating with me to make this happen! As always, it's amazing to see my work embraced in my hometown and I'm incredibly pleased to see such a diverse collection showcased in this beautiful new building.
From a variety of framed images to custom large scale canvases, this curated collection featuring local scenes, landmarks, and courthouse details from my Around the Hat series was one of the final elements installed to complete this amazing space.
Thank you to Stringam in Medicine Hat for reaching out and for collaborating with me to make this happen! As always, it's amazing to see my work embraced in my hometown and I'm incredibly pleased to see such a diverse collection showcased in this beautiful new building.
Catalogue:
Achievements
,
Alberta
,
Alberta Travel Photographer
,
Artwork
,
Contract Work
,
Images
,
Medicine Hat
,
Medicine Hat Photographer
,
Photography
Location:
Medicine Hat, AB, Canada
Sep 25, 2019
Behind the Scenes of the Clay Documentary
While I'm sure there will be further updates down the road as I began to promote and share this project with a wider audience, in the meantime I wanted to answer some of the questions I've received and provide some context for how all of this unfolded.
How was this documentary financed?
Money is always a popular topic, and in this instance I can certainly understand the curiosity because of the scale of what had to happen to produce this.
Earlier this year I received a message through the Editing Luke business website from a content producer working at TELUS HQ in Vancouver. I was essentially told that they were looking for Alberta filmmakers, had seen some of my work online, and were motivated to produce something before the end of August 2019.
They already had a budget in place and asked if I'd like to pitch them a documentary concept. This resulting project about how the industrial ruins of Medicine Hat's former clay industry were saved was that idea. We signed a contract, and by April I was in pre-production.
Was this a TELUS Storyhive project?
No. I've been asked this a couple times because I think a few people are familiar with filmmakers campaigning on social media for votes to get their ideas produced.
Part of what made this experience so unique is that it was TELUS who reached out to me and initiated this collaboration. I didn't apply for anything, I've never worked with TELUS before, and I've never done a Storyhive project in the past. Not bad, right? lol.
All that said, TELUS does a great job of investing in content production in the various markets they serve and I think they contacted me just to see if there was potential. It's cool that this worked out and that now we're both able to benefit from sharing an Alberta story that may not have been told otherwise.
What was the most challenging part of creating this documentary?
The time in which all of this had to happen was by far the most challenging aspect of this documentary. We signed a contract and my research began in April. I was in production through May and June, and then edited through July and August.
That's not a lot of time to find your story, connect with and schedule all your subjects for interviews, dig through archives, source music, footage, images, shoot b-roll, etc. etc.
I wasn't in this completely alone mind you - but I think you'll find that most feature length documentaries have more than 5 months between initial concept and delivery date.
Did you find anything you weren't expecting?
Surprisingly, yes. Some of the archival images of the abandoned factories and the vintage footage that was found for this documentary had never been widely released or seen before. Because my material was coming from various archives and often the interview subjects themselves, there was actually a lot that was uncovered, scanned, and digitized specifically for this film that probably won't turn up anywhere else.
What was the most memorable part of shooting this documentary?
There were a lot of memorable parts to this project, but the moment that sticks out because of how surreal it was has to be filming with James Marshall when he got the call that his friend Jack Forbes had passed away.
James and Jack are credited with starting the movement to save the old Medalta factory, so to be interviewing James as he shared stories about Jack and then to receive that call - that was a crazy bit of coincidence to capture on camera.
What was the biggest lesson you learned on this documentary?
I think that compelling stories can be hiding right under your nose. I'd been exploring the clay district for years, had grown up in Medicine Hat, and actually had no idea how elaborate the history of the clay district was or how it was saved prior to researching for this documentary.
I knew there was a big gap between when the factories had closed and when the Medalta museum had opened, but there was no formalized story written out for me to comprehend what had really happened in that time. From a narrative perspective, it was an amazing story to uncover.
Historic sites like this can be found all over North America in various stages of decay OR redevelopment - and in sharing the success of what's happened here, you never know who it might inspire to take a second look.
The introduction for Clay, Creativity & the Comeback can be viewed below, and to watch the complete 75 minute documentary CLICK HERE.
Catalogue:
Abandoned Places
,
Achievements
,
Alberta
,
Contract Work
,
Filmmaker Life
,
Historic Clay District
,
In the Media
,
Medicine Hat
,
National Historic Site of Canada
,
Production Notes
,
Random Videos and Edits
Location:
Medicine Hat, AB, Canada
Sep 20, 2019
Clay, Creativity & the Comeback: Documentary
Shooting and editing a feature length documentary in a matter of months is no small task - particularly when the story you're setting out to tell is one that hasn't really been documented before. This entire filmmaking experience was exhilarating, exhausting, eye-opening, and consuming - and the result was Clay, Creativity & the Comeback.
Clay, Creativity & the Comeback tells the story of how the industrial ruins and abandoned factories of Medicine Hat, Alberta's once booming clay industry were saved from demolition and became the inspiration for a renewed cultural landmark and National Historic Site of Canada.
Medalta Potteries (one of several pottery factories in the area) was where it all began. The idea behind saving this crumbling structure was a grand vision kickstarted by James Marshall and Jack Forbes in the 1970s. It was a dream fraught with obstacles that would take decades, countless volunteers, and an incredible amount of gumption to achieve.
This original documentary - Clay, Creativity & the Comeback - was made possible by the financial support of TELUS, by the amazing individuals who shared their first hand experiences, and through the cooperation of the Friends of Medalta Society and Medalta in the Historic Clay District (and their incredible team who rallied behind this idea).
Written, Produced, and Directed by Luke Fandrich.
An Editing Luke Production. Copyright 2019.
More about the behind the scenes production of this documentary here.
Clay, Creativity & the Comeback tells the story of how the industrial ruins and abandoned factories of Medicine Hat, Alberta's once booming clay industry were saved from demolition and became the inspiration for a renewed cultural landmark and National Historic Site of Canada.
Medalta Potteries (one of several pottery factories in the area) was where it all began. The idea behind saving this crumbling structure was a grand vision kickstarted by James Marshall and Jack Forbes in the 1970s. It was a dream fraught with obstacles that would take decades, countless volunteers, and an incredible amount of gumption to achieve.
This original documentary - Clay, Creativity & the Comeback - was made possible by the financial support of TELUS, by the amazing individuals who shared their first hand experiences, and through the cooperation of the Friends of Medalta Society and Medalta in the Historic Clay District (and their incredible team who rallied behind this idea).
Written, Produced, and Directed by Luke Fandrich.
An Editing Luke Production. Copyright 2019.
More about the behind the scenes production of this documentary here.
Catalogue:
Abandoned Places
,
Achievements
,
Alberta
,
Contract Work
,
Filmmaker Life
,
Historic Clay District
,
In the Media
,
Medicine Hat
,
National Historic Site of Canada
,
Production Notes
,
Random Videos and Edits
Location:
Medicine Hat, AB, Canada
Sep 19, 2019
Documentary Premiere at Medalta Potteries
Last night was a surreal experience. Thank you to everyone who came out to see the premiere of my documentary Clay, Creativity & the Comeback at Medalta. We seriously underestimated just how many people would show up - which was a great problem to have.
To be in this old factory, surrounded by many of the people who stepped up to save it, while watching a film I'd worked on for months inside what is now a National Historic Site of Canada - it was an experience I won't soon forget.
I've been truly humbled by the reactions and messages regarding the documentary and am so grateful to everyone who made it possible. Thank you for the incredible night!
Clay, Creativity & the Comeback will be released on the Editing Luke website tomorrow, September 20 for those who missed it.
To be in this old factory, surrounded by many of the people who stepped up to save it, while watching a film I'd worked on for months inside what is now a National Historic Site of Canada - it was an experience I won't soon forget.
I've been truly humbled by the reactions and messages regarding the documentary and am so grateful to everyone who made it possible. Thank you for the incredible night!
Clay, Creativity & the Comeback will be released on the Editing Luke website tomorrow, September 20 for those who missed it.
Catalogue:
Achievements
,
Alberta
,
Contract Work
,
Documentary
,
Filmmaker Life
,
Historic Clay District
,
In the Media
,
Medicine Hat
,
National Historic Site of Canada
,
Production Notes
Location:
Medicine Hat, AB, Canada
Sep 17, 2019
Canada Place in Vancouver, British Columbia
Catalogue:
British Columbia
,
Canada Series
,
Images
,
Photography
,
PNW Series
,
Vancouver
Location:
Vancouver, BC, Canada
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