Tag: Joe Timmerman

  • [Interview] Joe Timmerman Founder of “A Neighborhood Cleanup”

    [Interview] Joe Timmerman Founder of “A Neighborhood Cleanup”

    David Miller is the Editor and Publisher of Loveland Magazine

    by David Miller

    Loveland, Ohio – Joe Timmerman seems to be awfully young to be so old-school, but he’s both. I got reacquainted with him underneath the home-team basket at a winter basketball game in the Chuck Schmidt Gymnasium at Loveland High School. A Senior at the time, Joe had also been taking photos of the action and he came over and sat down on the floor with me and introduced himself,

    He wanted to know if I would publish some of his photographs in Loveland Magazine.

    His old-schoolness was when he described his approach to using film cameras and in very creative ways.

    ‘Liiife’ is within the borders of this black and white double exposure. I used Ilford HP5 Plus film when shooting these two photos — Laine’s face and a tree in my backyard — which share a single exposure. When I put the roll of film in my camera, I wanted to capture 24 portraits, underexposed in studio lighting, to fill the roll. Then, I chose to reel it back in to the point where the first exposure returned to the beginning, and capture 24 nature/lifestyle photos to randomly share a place on the film with the original portraits. The overarching risk factor of losing some personal pictures was left behind after developing the film and seeing what had come to life in the process. – Joseph Timmerman

    I was fascinated by his love of negative film and how sometimes he would be very deliberate in shooting a roll of 35 mm negatives in a way that each captured portrait could be used as the foreground for another image. The second image, a double exposure, involved Joe re-loading the already exposed roll of negatives back into his camera and then exposing a second image over the top of each of the portraits he shot on the first go-around.

    The results Joe showed me were a wonderful experiment in photography because of the hit/miss nature of composing a second image over the first. There is also the mastery of the correct exposure for each frame. Many of the double-exposures were taken of his girlfriend on their walks into Historic Downtown Loveland from his home. The final products have a rather ghost-like quality.

    I had given up film as soon as I purchased my first digital camera to use for Loveland Magazine reporting. It was out of the necessity to cut costs and be able to have the results almost instantly on my laptop and into a story. From my perspective after so many years of traveling to a camera store to buy the film, traveling back again to have the film developed and prints made, and back again for pick-up – Joe is old-school.

    Joe Timmerman smiles outside the Cintas Center after he graduated from Loveland High School in 2019. Timmerman is studying photojournalism at Ohio University

    I also discovered that night under the basketball hoop that I had known Joe since he was very little but didn’t recognize him. We once attended the same church. I was inspired by Joe that night and did some of my own experiments.

    Joe’s old-schoolness even involved making his own paper from scratch for a photo project during his first year at Ohio University.

    Joe’s old-schoolness is also how he will credit the way his parents raised him for his concern for the immediate environment around him. I think it more than just that though and appreciate another old-school quality he possesses – Joe is very humble always giving credit to others and he is generous with a “Thank you.”

    Some of the trash A Neighborhood Cleanup removed from the Little Miami River on Saturday (photo by Joe Timmerman © 2020)

    Joe founded “A Neighborhood Cleanup” in 2019. The inspiration was walking in the East Loveland Nature Preserve with his mother and seeing so much trash left by other visitors. He says that growing up his father taught him to always pick up trash when he sees it, especially in his own neighborhood and the places he loves. Last August A Neighborhood Cleanup cleaned the nature preserve and another spot he loved, the rope swing on the bank of the Little Miami just north of Nisbet Park in Historic Downtown.

    Joe has been back to cleaning the rope swing area this spring and last Saturday expanded the cleanup to include the river from Nisbet Park to the rope swing on the opposite river bank – along Cones Road.

    A Neighborhood Cleanup filled a pickup with trash they removed from the Little Miami River on Saturday. The Little Miami River is one of 156 American rivers designated by the U.S. Congress or the Secretary of the Interior as a National Wild and Scenic River and runs through the middle of Loveland, Ohio. (photo by Joe Timmerman © 2020)

    An interesting note is that Loveland’s most famous old-school photographer Nancy Ford Cones once lived at the Roads Inn Farm on Cones Road when she took her famous Loveland photos, Her favorite subjects were family and friends she posed on those same river banks that Joe and friends are now restoring to their intended beauty. The Loveland Musem Center has a nice collection of Cone’s photos and many of them have an ethereal, ghost-like quality similar to Joe Timmerman’s double exposures.

    This interview took place along the riverbank Joe and volunteers were cleaning last Saturday afternoon.

    Joe inspires his own generation, those to come, and those beyond.

     

    “Like” and “follow” A Neighborhood Cleanup on FaceBook and you will be able to support the efforts and know when the next group cleanup is planned. You might also contact Joe and offer to donate garbage bags and gloves as a way of helping.

    Here is a link to Joe’s photography website where you can read more about him and see some of his inspiring art.

    This is the rope swing seen from the opposite side of the river that A Neighborhood Cleanup worked on last Saturday. As you can see, the river has become a very popular spot that many young people call home. Joe Timmerman and his supporters cleared the robe swing area of trash on June 2.

    Read about the June 2 cleanup at the rope swing…

    A Neighborhood Cleanup: be the change that you want to see…

    A Guest Column by Joe Timmerman
    This is some of the trash A Neighborhood Cleanup removed from the river on June 2.

  • August 17 is “A Neighborhood Cleanup” day

    August 17 is “A Neighborhood Cleanup” day

    “An Event that anyone could and should do.”

    – Joe Timmerman

    Loveland, Ohio – Recent Loveland High School graduate, Joe Timmerman said that growing up, his dad, Dan Timmerman, would

    Joe Timmerman smiles outside the Cintas Center at his graduation from Loveland High School last June. Timmerman will be studying photojournalism at Ohio University

    make him and his brothers walk down their street in Loveland and pick up the trash alongside the road that people throw out of their car windows. “Whenever we go on walks in our neighborhood, on the bike trail or in the nature preserve, my dad always picks the trash up to throw away,” Joe Timmerman said.

     

    “My dad inspired the original idea and after following in his footsteps in Loveland and in travels, I thought it would be a good idea to make it an event that anyone could and should do.”

     




  • Loveland High School students earn prestigious awards and recognition for visual arts and creative writing

    Loveland, Ohio – The following Loveland High School (LHS) students have earned prestigious awards and recognition by the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards for their 2019 Visual Arts entries:

    Isabella Huelsman’s Gold Key-winning submission “Teeth.”

    Seniors Isabella Huelsman won a Gold Key (Photography), two Silver Keys (Photography) and two Honorable Mentions (Ceramics and Mixed-Media); Jillian Sealschott earned a Silver Key (Drawing); Joe Timmerman earned an Honorable Mention (Photography); Leslie Nash earned a Silver Key (Ceramics); and Samuel Richardson won one Gold Key (Photography) and three Silver Keys (Photography, Digital Art, Film & Animation).

    Juniors Olivia Bransford earned two Silver Keys (Painting); Tristan Dumas earned a Silver Key (Photography); and Hannah Powers earned two Silver Keys (Painting) and one Honorable Mention (Painting).

    Sophomores Lillianne Rohling earned a Gold Key (Drawing & Illustration) and Sophia Stokes earned an Honorable Mention (Sculpture).

    LHS students also made an impressive contribution in the 2019 Creative Writing competition: Senior Anna Ross earned a Scholastic Writing Awards Silver Key and two Honorable Mentions; Junior Vivien Terselic earned a Scholastic Gold Key, Silver Key, and Honorable Mention; Junior Kieran Collins earned a Scholastic Silver Key and has been named as an Overture Awards Semi-Finalist; and Senior Zach Segal has been named as an Overture Awards Semi-Finalist.

    “Elastic Lines” by Senior Isabella Huelsman won a Gold Key for photography.

    Gold Key award-winning works, both in the Visual Arts and Creative Writing categories, are considered the very best submitted locally and automatically move on to compete at the national level.

    About the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards

    Since 1923, the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards have recognized the vision, ingenuity and talent of the nation’s youth. The Awards are presented by the Alliance for Young Artists and Writers, whose mission is to identify students with exceptional artistic and literary talent. Through the Awards, students earn opportunities for recognition, exhibition, publication and scholarships.

    The Digital Art of Sam Richardson – “Way Up in the Sky”

    The recognized artwork by Loveland High School students in the Visual Arts competition was on display at the Art Academy of Cincinnati, January 28-February 8, 2019, and can be viewed via this link.