Category: Photography

Caleb Kenna Pop Up Photography Show

Caleb Kenna Vermont Drone Photography Pop-Up Exhibition in Brandon Outdoor Photo Show – Socially Distanced Self-Guided Fine Art Photography Show 20% Off Print Prices Visitors welcome to view prints displayed in the windows of a 1910 – Era Tea House – Observatory on Mount Pleasant 40 Old Farm Road, Brandon, Vermont 05733 Extended until December… Read more »

 The New York Times Publishes Behold Vermont, From Above

On July 13, 2020, (online) and July 15, 2020 (Print) The New York Times published Behold Vermont, From Above, a photo essay with text and 17 photos about my drone photography in Vermont. The response has been incredible, with a flood of comments, emails, print requests, Instagram followers and messages on Facebook and Linked-In. I am… Read more »

India Rewind: 2000-2020

Click on pictures to see full size gallery, story below. During one of my first trips to India in 2002, I arrived in Delhi expecting to see throngs of people bustling about the city. Instead the streets were empty with almost no one around. As I walked around in disbelief, three young men on a… Read more »

Portraits

One of my most memorable photo assignments was to photograph strangers in Windsor, Connecticut when I was fourteen years old. I was a freshman in high school taking my first photography class with Walter Rabetz in 1984 at Loomis Chaffee School. It was terrifying and exhilarating – walk up and engage a perfect stranger and… Read more »

Mazy

Mazy Two weeks ago we lost our nine-year old Golden Retriever Mazy. She had been treated for tick-borne and auto-immune diseases in Burlington and had been home in Brandon for ten days. When she faltered late one Tuesday night, I drove her back to the Burlington Emergency Veterinarian Hospital and she died on the way… Read more »

A Bird’s-eye View of Vermont

Four Seasons Above Vermont’s Landscape I’ve been using a drone to make aerial photographs of Vermont for several years, but only recently have I been photographing straight down on the landscapes of the Green Mountains. My first impulse as a drone photographer was to go as high as possible – 400 feet – and make… Read more »