DIANE FULMER
The mother of three and grandmother of seven, Diane, a Savannah native, retired from her nursing career to discover a passion for photography.
She returned to Armstrong Atlantic State University in Savannah to learn the deeper aspects of image making, with a strong love for printing from the negative in a digital world. Diane immersed herself in classical black and white and Lith printing, a darkroom process used widely in Europe. She continues to explore new techniques including the art of digital photography.
Although Diane prefers coastal scenes, she also enjoys architecture, still life and portraits captured in the landscape. She strives to bring emotion and meaning to her photographs and uses SLR and medium format film and digital cameras.
Her nursing background and desire to share her passion led her to volunteer at Hospice Savannah as photographer for End of Life Family Photographer, a program she started in 2007.
Diane continues to develop her darkroom skills through independent studies at AASU, demonstrate her Lith and Sepia techniques for Photography classes at AASU under Linda Jensen, Professor of Photography. In March 2010 she attended a seven day workshop with John Sexton in Carmel, California to refine her photography and darkroom skills. In 2019 she worked with David Michael Kennedy in El Rito, New Mexico to work with Platinum Palladium process.
Juried into: 2009 Telfair Art Show
She returned to Armstrong Atlantic State University in Savannah to learn the deeper aspects of image making, with a strong love for printing from the negative in a digital world. Diane immersed herself in classical black and white and Lith printing, a darkroom process used widely in Europe. She continues to explore new techniques including the art of digital photography.
Although Diane prefers coastal scenes, she also enjoys architecture, still life and portraits captured in the landscape. She strives to bring emotion and meaning to her photographs and uses SLR and medium format film and digital cameras.
Her nursing background and desire to share her passion led her to volunteer at Hospice Savannah as photographer for End of Life Family Photographer, a program she started in 2007.
Diane continues to develop her darkroom skills through independent studies at AASU, demonstrate her Lith and Sepia techniques for Photography classes at AASU under Linda Jensen, Professor of Photography. In March 2010 she attended a seven day workshop with John Sexton in Carmel, California to refine her photography and darkroom skills. In 2019 she worked with David Michael Kennedy in El Rito, New Mexico to work with Platinum Palladium process.
Juried into: 2009 Telfair Art Show