Painting, Phil Durgan |
Can we agree that this Buffalo winter has been a real humdinger? Misery for most, heaven for some, what we haven’t seen are many blue sky days. This has made the shooting of my album cover, “Here Beneath the Blue,” a near impossibility.
I had pictured me standing, relaxed arms wide open, under a
brilliant, clear blue sky. However, glamour shots in 20° weather with icy howling
winds don’t portray the laid back vibe I’m shooting for. Streaming eyes, nose
and flailing hair might be fine for a metal band, not classic jazz.
Friends suggested Photoshopping me into an idyllic
background – dependent only on a good shot and mad editing skills. While I’m at
it, why not copy/paste a 20 lb. slimmer body on me, put a margarita in my hand with
a nearby pool boy and call it a day?
No, desperate times lead to desperate measures. Somehow, I’d
create my own blue sky; that is to say, hire an artist to paint a blue sky
behind me while I posed happily beneath it.
Luckily, I know a few wonderful painters and was able to
line up the talented abstract artist, Phil Durgan to be my performance painter.
I supplied him with a thumbnail sketch of my vision and we were on our way!
What to wear for my cover – sexy, vulnerable, spiritual or slinky?
Ask an expert. Last night I met with BFF and style maven Pamela Sieracki who
shopped my closet for five potentially awesome outfits. She combined fabrics
and colors like the designer she is and advised me against my own “What Not To
Wear” disasters.
In two days, the photo shoot will be a coordination effort
worthy of D-day: first, my hair will be cut and styled by Michele Ruffino of R
Salon. Then, my face will be painted, troweled, and airbrushed by Hollywood makeup artist, Dani Weiser.
Next, it’s off to the indoor loft apartment/future French
bistro owned by the generous Paul and Sandra Wilkins. It has the distressed
brick look I’m hoping for, plus lots of natural light. Phil will arrive on site
with his partially finished canvas and painting supplies to set up a live
backdrop to my posing.
Then, it’s time for my photographer, Marc Murphy to work his
magic with existing light and my thoroughly natural, hey-I-look-this-good-everyday,
appearance. If all goes as planned, I’ll look happy and open – here beneath the
blue. Just like in real life, when blue skies in Buffalo are not cooperating,
we create our own.