Paul is a local retired attorney who practiced law and photography for 37 years. He had an office, The Law Center, in North Fork for five years until he retired from full-time lawyering in 2004. He has continued on with photography, writing and fishing, though not necessarily in that order. He and his wife, Marcia, and their friends, Joe Cocker and Chili Dog, live in Wishon
As a young child, Paul sat up late at night watching his Dad, a lithographer, hand-carve linoleum blocks as part of his job at Lord Menu Co. in Los Angeles. It wasn’t until years later that Paul was able to relate his ability to read with ease black and white photo negatives and compose subject matter, to those experiences with his Dad – linoleum blocks used in printing are carved “upside down and backwards” – a virtual negative. Paul has used that skill in developing what he calls “photographics” – black and white photos which use lithographic film sheets to create the appearance of pen and ink and charcoal drawings. Paul has taught photography at the Pacific College of Art and Design, Medford, Oregon, and for the Kings-Tulare Regional Arts Council in Porterville. He has shown his work in galleries from Big Bear Lake, CA to Ashland and Medford, OR, where he was a founding member of the “Siskiyou Artworks”, an art co-op. He is a past President of the North Fork Arts Council (and a founding member). For four years he wrote the “Catch o’ the Day” column for the Sierra Star, and remains an avid and practicing fly fisher. In his spare time he contemplates how he ever found time to work.
All photographs and photographs of art work on this website are copyright protected and may not be reproduced or used in any manner without the express written permission of the artist.
Here is a slide show sample of some of Paul's Photographic Artistry:
Paul Henry Abram