Keyhole Photo
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  • February15th

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    It is old news to most of us in lower Alabama, and certainly City of Prichard retirees who have been denied their benefits have been dealing with the problem for over a year, but New York Times reporter Michael Cooper came to town in December to report on the financial problems in Prichard, which, it turns out is the only city in the U.S. to stop paying its retirees. His story explains it better than I can and is well worth a read if you haven’t seen it already. I had the opportunity to meet some of the people who have been most affected by the failed system while working on the story.

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  • March24th

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    Guide Rock, Nebraska

    Heritage Highway 136 winds through Southern Nebraska in 238 scenic miles, which includes the town of Red Cloud, the childhood home of Pulizter-prize winning prairie-life author Willa Cather. Jeff Haller, who is also a Red Cloud native has been asked to judge the 2010 Heritage Highway Photography contest, along with photographer Jorn Olson, and artist Valerie Knobel, for the Heritage Highway 136 Byway Community.

    This is the second time Haller has been asked to judge the contest, which seeks photography that expresses the cultural, archeological, historic, natural, scenic, or recreational aspects of the communities along the route, and boasts a grand prize package that includes a stay at the Yost Farm Cottage, a three room, modern cottage located on the edge of Red Cloud in the heart of Catherland.

    “The towns along the highway offer a variety of visually interesting subjects, and culturally important ones as well,” Haller said.

    “I grew up driving around, searching for scenes there myself. It’s really where I got my start in photography. I’m excited to see what the photographers come up with.”

    Entries are due between March 15, 2010 and January 1, 2011. Send or deliver physical submissions to the Willa Cather Foundation, 413 N. Webster Street, Red Cloud, NE 68970, and email digital submissions to heritagehighway136@live.com.


  • January18th

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    Jeff and Meggan Haller will exhibit images from their Bon Temps Mardi Gras photo project at Cortlandt's.

    Jeff and Meggan Haller will exhibit prints from their Bon Temps photo project at Cortlandt’s.

    Jeff and Meggan Haller, owners of Keyhole Photo, will launch Bon Temps: The Fancy and Folly of Mobile’s Mardi Gras, a photo exhibition about Mardi Gras in Mobile, Ala., February 1, 2010, to coincide with the opening of Cortlandt’s, in Oakleigh Garden District.

    The exhibition, which will include some of the photographs featured in the January 2010 issue of Mobile Bay Monthly Magazine, is the culmination of two years of work photographing the carnival season in Mobile. “Mardi Gras is an incredibly rich tradition, here, and one that we are constantly inspired by,” Jeff Haller said. “I’ve enjoyed photographing it.”

    The show will open with over 25 prints that explore the pageantry and revelry of both public and private events, as well as some of the behind-the-scenes. Cortlandt’s, which will exhibit the work, is a new, upscale casual bar and restaurant on the corner of George and Savannah streets in Oakleigh, owned by Mobile native Chef Cortlandt Inge. Meggan Haller said she thought Cortlandt’s was a good fit for the show’s first exhibition because it has recently been renovated and is well-suited to larger bodies of work like Bon Temps.

    Though the project is on-going, Meggan Haller said the time is right to start exhibiting the work. “I think we’ll always be working on it, but I’m hoping that the more people know about what we’re doing, the more they’ll want to help us out with ideas.” Haller said. She said that she and Jeff appreciate input and suggestions for possible photo subjects. “One of the coolest things about Mardi Gras is that there are so many ways to celebrate it,” Haller said. “Whether it’s an exclusive organization or a family tradition — we’re interested in all of it.”

    If you have ideas for Jeff and Meggan’s Bon Temps Mardi Gras photography project, get in touch. Cortlandt’s is located at 351 George St. in Mobile, Ala.


  • October7th

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    Blaine Minnick, 5, rides his miniature John Deere tractor by a line full of clean laundry on a late summer day just outside of Red Cloud.

    Blaine Minnick, 5, rides his miniature John Deere tractor by a line full of clean laundry on a late summer day just outside of Red Cloud.

    Somewhere in the Middle of America: Life in a Prairie Town, photographer Jeff Haller’s solo exhibition, will be opening at the Mobile Arts Council Gallery, Monday, November 2, 2009. It will remain on display until Friday, November 27. The Mobile Arts Council will host a gallery talk with Haller Saturday, November 14, at 11 a.m.

    The show is the culmination of two months of photographing in Red Cloud, Neb., Haller’s hometown, and was produced as part of Haller’s project for Ohio University’s School of Visual Communication Master of Arts degree.

    Haller, who currently lives in Mobile, Ala., with his wife, Meggan, said he was excited about launching the exhibit.
    “It’s really awesome to be able to offer my vision to the people of Red Cloud,” Haller said. “I think when people live anywhere, they become used to seeing certain things, expecting certain things, and they form this picture in their minds of what their town is like. I stepped away for so long that I was able to come back and offer a fresh perspective.”

    Haller, a Red Cloud native, attended Red Cloud High School, and later, the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, where he earned a Bachelor of Journalism degree.

    Somewhere in the Middle of America: Life in a Prairie Town features more than thirty prints from Haller’s work. It will be on display until Friday, November 27, 2009.

    The exhibition comes to Mobile after shows at the Red Cloud Opera House, Red Cloud, Neb., The Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center, Sioux City, Iowa, and The Great Plains Art Museum at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln, Neb.


  • October7th

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    Girls Night Out poster

    Girls Night Out

    Keyhole Photo is sponsoring the seventh Girls Night Out at Calagaz Photo & Digital Imaging to benefit Penelope House, October 20, 2009.

    Penelope House is a non-profit organization established in 1979 to help victims of domestic violence regain social and economic independence.

    The Family Violence Center is the only shelter for battered women and children in Mobile, Alabama. Penelope House offers advocacy, community education, counseling, on-site medical care, schools prevention education, transitional living, and victims’ support groups.

    Donations will be accepted at the event to benefit Penelope House.

    In addition to donating a free Panorama Portrait session ($300 value!) to the raffle, Jeff and Meggan will be at the event taking photos of all the fun! And a Photo Booth will be on-site so you can take your own photos as well. Look for an email from Calagaz after the event with details on how you can order photos.

    Please join Keyhole Photo and all the event’s sponsors for a night of fashion, photography, fun, and cool prizes, all for charity, at Calagaz Photo & Digital Imaging, 90 Springdale Blvd., Mobile, AL 36606, (251) 478-0487.



  • September18th

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    Jeff and Meggan photographed the Cox-Deasy House at night for the Look Up Mobile! 2nd Annual Photographic Landmark Hunt

    Jeff and Meggan photographed the Cox-Deasy House at night for the Look Up Mobile! 2nd Annual Photographic Landmark Hunt

    Jeff and Meggan Haller were honored to be asked to participate, along with four other local professional photographers, in the Look Up Mobile! 2nd Annual Photographic Landmark Hunt to benefit South Alabama CARES in Mobile, Ala.

    Participating photographers were asked to photograph historic or recognizable locations throughout Mobile. Twenty-five of the photographs were chosen for inclusion in the Look Up Mobile! booklet to be used as clues in the landmark hunt contest, as well as sold in a silent auction with the remaining photographs.

    The winners will be announced September 24, 2009, at the gala auction.

    All proceeds generated through these activities benefit the programs and services of South Alabama CARES. Founded in 1987, South Alabama CARES functions as the regional access point for support services and education in Baldwin, Butler, Choctaw, Clarke, Conecuh, Covington, Escambia, Marengo, Mobile, Monroe, Washington and Wilcox counties. South Alabama CARES is recognized as a vital resource providing help and hope to men, women and children living with HIV/AIDS.

    Currently, the Look Up Mobile! 2009 photographs are on display in the Mobile Arts Council’s Skinny Gallery, at 318 Dauphin Street in downtown Mobile. In addition to Keyhole Photo, the photographers this year are Jason Clark, Lesa Jones, Craig Roberts and David Trimmier.



  • August10th

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    Auction Will Raise Money for Documentary Photography

    FEBRUARY 20, 2010 at THE STEPHEN COHEN GALLERY

    Actor and photographer Aaron Eckhart, will join Julia Dean, founder of the Julia Dean Photo Workshops, for an exhibit and silent auction of more than 100 iconic images taken by leading photographers from around the world at the Stephen Cohen Gallery in Los Angeles on February 20, 2010.

    A combine harvests wheat shortly after sunset just west of town on an early summer evening. Agriculture is still a mainstay of life in Red Cloud, Neb., though the size of the farms and cost of production have grown drastically, making small family farms a thing of the past.

    A combine harvests wheat shortly after sunset just west of town on an early summer evening. Agriculture is still a mainstay of life in Red Cloud, Neb., though the size of the farms and cost of production have grown drastically, making small family farms a thing of the past.

    The auction will feature images from such nationally and internationally known photographers as Alex Webb, Art Streiber, Brian Lanker, David Hume Kennerly, Don Barletti, Douglas Kirkland, Gerd Ludwig, Greg Gorman, Mary Ellen Mark, Nevada Wier, Phil Borges, Robert Farber, Ron Haviv and Sam Abell. Included in the auction will also be Jeff Haller’s 2006 image entitled “Wheat Harvest,” a photograph from Haller’s Somewhere in the Middle of America: Life in a Prairie Town project.

    The auction will benefit Project 5: Photography for Social Change, which supports talented photojournalists and builds documentary photography through grants, exhibits and publications. (See images: http://www.photo4change.org/silentauction.html.)

    Project 5’s silent auctions will raise money for a five-year series of photo documentary projects on five pressing social issues: child labor, educational access, health care, immigration, economic globalization. The February 2010 auction will raise funds to complete Dean’s current collaborative project, Child Labor and the Global Village.

    “Photographers look through their lenses at society and the environment, but they also see through their hearts,” says Dean, the Los Angeles documentary photographer who founded Project 5. “As the economy takes a toll on the traditional patrons of documentary photography, such as newspapers and magazines, new support is needed. We must not lose a generation of important stories.”

    Pre-viewing: Photographs will be available for pre-viewing on Friday and Saturday (February19 & 20) prior to the auction. The $50 entrance ticket will be counted toward the price of a photograph. Tickets can be purchased in advance. Call 310-392-0909 or write to  julia[at]photo4change.org.

    February 20, 2010, 7:00-10:00 P.M.

    The Stephen Cohen Gallery, 7358 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90036 Valet parking available.

    Photo4Change –  www.photo4change.org – 801 Ocean Front Walk, Studio 8, Venice CA 90291 – ph: 310-392-0909 – fx: 310-664-0809

    Contact: Julia Dean or Agi Magyari
    310-392-0909
    Info[at]photo4change.org or Julia[at]photo4change.org


  • August9th

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    Mobile, Ala. – Aug. 7, 2009 – Keyhole Photo today announced Jeff Haller’s celebrated acceptance into the Wedding Photojournalist Association (WPJA), an International, membership-based organization representing professional photographers skilled in the documentation of weddings and events in a candid, unobtrusive style. As a WPJA member, Haller, co-owner of Keyhole Photo, joins the ranks of some of the most talented wedding photojournalists in the world as judged by their technical, creative and visual aptitude.

    Jennifer Sirmon is reflected in a mirror held by her father, Joel Sirmon, as she takes a peek into Fairhope United Methodist Church, before the start of the ceremony in which she married Jeff Peters, July 20, 2009, in Fairhope, Ala.

    Jennifer Sirmon is reflected in a mirror held by her father, Joel Sirmon, as she takes a peek into Fairhope United Methodist Church, before the start of the ceremony in which she married Jeff Peters, July 20, 2009, in Fairhope, Ala.

    Haller will be held to strict membership standards regarding image quality and content, technical and creative technique, website and marketing professionalism, business ethics and communication. In turn, he gains prestigious affiliation with one of the industry’s top professional organizations. Haller can further gain admittance into quarterly competitions, where his work will be judged by some of the world’s most respected and accomplished award-winning photojournalists.

    “I am really happy to be joining other well-respected photographers in the ranks of WPJA,” Haller said. “I think the organization offers discerning brides and grooms the ability to easily find photographers that suit their tastes. I have high hopes of being connected with the types of people who appreciate our style of photography.”

    Haller and his wife, Meggan Haller, work as a team to offer engagement and wedding coverage to clients throughout the greater Gulf Coast region plus select destination wedding coverage.

    To learn more about Haller and Keyhole Photo, view his portfolio by visiting keyholephoto.com.