8 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, July 23, 2001 I Some might think being an artist is a life-long journey fair goers from around the country inspected his art and that's my dream." - artists are people who always loved to draw, paint, or drew their breaths in. "I like the wow. It's like clapping. create. But although artists Dave Badger, Laura It's performance. It's just knowing that I can have this 4 &a/ettenam z ' Coppedge and John Hass don't have much in common, effect on people." besides being exhibitors at the 31st Annual Ann Arbor Art Fairs last week, none of them expected that art would one day be their career. When he was a kid, Dave Badger never thought he'd grow up to be an artist. In fact, 'e Badger Badger said he never even picked up a pencil F;' until his second year of college. Even then, becoming an artist did- u n't seem like a choice he hadmiade. "I had to admit I ; ..'t was an artist after while," said the Indi- anapolis resident, who has been selling his A drawing by Dave Badger. "That'sr artwork at art shows for summer home," he said. "If you like the last ten years. you should see my winter home." Badger said he started drawing during the Vietnam War, when his father encouraged him to go to college instead of entering the military. He went to the University of California-Los Angeles, but didn't know what he wanted to do with his life. Under the direction of the school he went into architecture, a field he excelled at but was never quite the best in. Coppedge When a friend from the university, who continuously won the school's architecture design contests, asked him to be his business partner, Badger agreed. The business took off, giving Badger the step up that he needed to go out on his own and become a professional artist. Badger's drawings, whimsical castles based off of organic details from seashells and rock formations and comedic illustrations, all stem from his architectural background, which trained him to catch fine details. But Badger's real passion stems from trees. "It's a very natural thing. Most artists use trees as a backdrop, but it's never used as a subject itself," he said, adding that trees often have too much detail for most artists to capture. One of Badger's first drawings was of the Serengetti in Kenya, one of the most photographed trees in the world. It was recently struck down by lightning, a fact Badger said with regret. In the end, it is not his passion for trees that drives Bad- ger to art shows across the country. John Hass "I get a charge out of wowing people," he said, as art /4 !A' to4 65e $p It's not the "wow" that provoked Laura Coppedge, a resident of Jacksonville, Fla., to become a professional photograpshic artist. Coppedge, whose background is in interior and graphic design, changed her profession after she found it was easier to make a living taking pic- tures than designing living rooms. "It's a gradual thing because you think that maybe it's not going to work and all you're going to get is a huge credit debt" she said. She started out slowly, working at a dark- room during the day and printing her own pic- tures at night for years, until she finally realized she couldn't keep up the pace and would have to let something -- her hobby or her job - go. "I kinda jumped in just doing shows," Coppedge said, adding she has never had help with her art. "I ty tend to work pretty much alone because I'm on the that road." Although Coppedge faces some competition among her peers, she said she doesn't consider her work any better than the work of other photographers. "I don't actively think about standing out from anybody else, I just try to make it so there is a lot of light - and dark," she said. "I hope my pictures kinda make you think of a story, and maybe you can finish the story." Most of her photographs feature people in dramatic scenes and try to reflect motion and movement, some of the biggest challenges Coppedge faces while working. "I really like how movement shows ip in photography," she said. "I might shoot a role of film and get nothing close." Coppedge said another challenge she faces as an artist is the possibility of running out of ideas. "It's hard some days when you wake up sometimes and think, 'what am I going to take a picture of today?' and half of the times, you don't even know," she said. "Sometimes it's not easy. Sometimes you get tired of it." And by Saturday afternoon, Coppedge was tired. "I'm really ready to go home and see my cats," she said, adding that being on the road was time off from work. "When you are on the road, you can't really work in the darkroom." But tired as she may be, Coppedge is still excited about what the next couple years might bring. "My future aspirations one day are maybe to have a book published and see how that goes," she said. "I think Unlike Coppedge, John Hass, a 33-year veter fairs, is choosing to slow down his artistic car4 In his earlier years, Hass used to travel fromF New York to participate in 30 art shows a year. The University alum, who has a degree in p1 now down to only six shows a year. He spends t1 the time in his Eau Claire home with his wife, and kids, where he is a construction worker and tI of a small parish. Bass said that while coming to Ann Arbor in the reaps some financial rewards, it is also a tradition ft "I started doing this show 27 years ago when y just set up on the grass anywhere you like," "(Financially) this is notan average art fair." His artistic endevours started as a hobby wh e at Bell Labs. Bored and in need of a change, he job. "I just started to experiment in some things tl never done before and it developed into this, gradually," he said. "We traveled the country for about 10 years." He said he hopes to produce feelings from his artwork, crafted from wood and painted with soft-colored acrylics, and that he does- n't take the credit for the final piece. "I give God all the credit for everything I can do. I believe everything has a source in him," Hass said. "He's a creator, and I think a lot of artists have that same urge in them. They want to create things." 1 i