
Spring is soon. Ocean Grove , NJ. Stephen Goldfinger is a Grover . April, 2015. Paul Goldfinger photo.
KARRIN ALLYSON:
Posted in Ocean Grove portraits, People in the neighborhood, Photograph by Paul Goldfinger, Photography portraits, Photography: Ocean Grove Gallery, Photography: Ocean Grove portraits, tagged Stephen on May 10, 2023|
Posted in Photograph by Paul Goldfinger, Photographic Gallery: New Jersey, Photography Jersey Shore, Photography: Ocean Grove Gallery, tagged e, Fletcher Lake in Ocean Grove on March 4, 2023|
LIONEL HAMPTON AND OSCAR PETERSON
Posted in Ocean Grove lifestyles, Ocean Grove Musical Event, Ocean Grove portraits, Ocean Grove tent colony, Photography at The Jersey Shore, Photography by Paul Goldfinger, Photography: Ocean Grove Gallery, tagged Ronald Naldi in Ocean Grove on January 9, 2023|
We first posted this shot of the great tenor Ronald Naldi one year ago. Here is a link which tells about this photo and offers a recording of Ron performing on one of his albums of Italian music. But meanwhile, here are the Chiffons offering a tribute of their own.
https://blogfinger.net/2015/07/26/a-musical-riddle-on-blogfinger/
THE CHIFFONS:
Posted in Ocean Grove Great Auditorium, Ocean Grove lifestyles, Ocean Grove Musical Event, Photograph by Paul Goldfinger, Photography at The Jersey Shore, Photography: Ocean Grove Gallery, tagged music in Ocean Grove, The Great Auditorium on December 27, 2022| 2 Comments »
* Quote from Radar O’Reilly in the TV series “M.A.S.H.”
MSTISLAV ROSTROPOVICH: BACH’S CELLO SUITE #1 in G major, prélude:
Posted in Ocean Grove beachfront, Ocean Grove Gallery, Photograph by Paul Goldfinger, Photography: Jersey Shore Gallery, Photography: Ocean Grove Gallery, tagged An Ocean Grove beach day on October 12, 2022|
CITY OF PRAGUE ORCHESTRA. “Octapussy—All Time High” From the James Bond Gold Collection
Posted in Blogfinger Presents, Photography: Ocean Grove Gallery, Poems by Charles Pierre, Poetry on Blogfinger on September 25, 2022|
Reprieve
By Charles Pierre
From a rusted nail
on the south wall
of an old boathouse
weathered to gray,
a small pail of
red impatiens
swings in the mild
November sun,
where the rush
of stark sea wind
has yet to dim
the arc of lush color.
EVA CASSIDY
From her album Songbird.
Posted in Blogfinger Presents, Ocean Grove portraits, Photograph by Paul Goldfinger, Photographs presented on Blogfinger, Photography: Ocean Grove Gallery, Photography: Ocean Grove portraits on December 28, 2021|
Posted in Photography at The Jersey Shore, Photography: Jersey Shore Gallery, Photography: Ocean Grove Gallery, tagged Days in Ocean Grove, PHOTO: Days Ice Cream on November 19, 2021|

Days Ice Cream in Ocean Grove. Undated photo. Silver gelatin print by Paul Goldfinger ©
ANITA O’DAY
“Ah, the apple trees,
Blossoms in the breeze,
That we walked among,
Lying in the hay,
Games we used to play,
While the rounds were sung,
Only yesterday, when the world was young.”
Posted in Blogfinger Presents, Ocean Grove tent colony, Ocean Grove tent village, Photography at The Jersey Shore, Photography: Jersey Shore Gallery, Photography: Ocean Grove Gallery, tagged Ocean Grove tent village on June 19, 2021| 1 Comment »
By Paul Goldfinger, Editor @Blogfinger.net
It must be great fun to be a kid living in a tent during an Ocean Grove summer. Instead of bicycles to zoom around the sidewalks of the Village, there are now skateboards and scooters.
I saw a teenager coasting down Mt. Hermon Way on a skateboard, in her gravity defying short shorts, maintaining her decorum all the while speaking on a cell phone. It is certain—-someday she will have a tattoo, and her parents will approve. This is the new look of femininity.
But the Village girl, on her scooter, shows no sign of becoming anything but a proper young lady.
JUDY GARLAND from The Wizard of Oz.
“Somewhere over the rainbow bluebirds fly
Birds fly over the rainbow.
Why then, oh, why can’t I?
“If happy little bluebirds fly
Beyond the rainbow.
Why, oh, why can’t I?”
Posted in Blogfinger Presents, Ocean Grove beachfront, Photography: Jersey Shore Gallery, Photography: Ocean Grove Gallery, tagged Photo: Ocean Grove south beach on March 18, 2021|
PAOLO NUTINI and the PRESERVATION HALL JAZZ BAND (New Orleans)
Posted in Blogfinger Presents, Ocean Grove magic moments, Photograph by Paul Goldfinger, Photography in New Jersey, Photography: Jersey Shore Gallery, Photography: Ocean Grove Gallery, tagged Getting high in Ocean Grove on November 4, 2020| 1 Comment »
FRANK SINATRA: “…..and don’t tell mama!”
Posted in Blogfinger Presents, Photography: Jersey Shore Gallery, Photography: Ocean Grove Gallery, tagged Edward Weston on Blogfinger, photographic art on Blogfinger on July 26, 2019|

Ocean Grove south dumpster. The essential beauty of things. Paul Goldfinger photograph. © 2015. Blogfinger.net
By Paul Goldfinger, Photography Editor @Blogfinger.net
Edward Weston famously photographed objects such as peppers and a toilet bowl. He saw intrinsic beauty in things. The art community often tried to discover comprehensible meaning in his work, such as the sexual suggestions seen in the pepper. But he found meaning in the photographic print itself–i.e. the paper with the image embedded on it.
Critics love the richness and subtle beauty of his black and white tones apart from the subject matter. Weston worked for perfection in his negatives and in his darkroom printing. That is where he found his artistic expression. In his “Day Books” he would talk about his negatives, and all he needed was one high quality neg from a day’s work and he was ecstatic.
About the pepper he said, “It is a classic, completely satisfying, ‒ a pepper ‒ but more than a pepper; abstract, in that it is completely outside subject matter. It has no psychological attributes, no human emotions are aroused: this new pepper takes one beyond the world we know in the conscious mind.”
I sort of get what Weston is talking about in terms of finding beauty in objects that transcends the object itself, and then again, at the next level, in the print itself.
I have never been much interested in still lifes (Weston called his pepper a “still life.”) But some photographic artists love the trees, rocks and mountains (Ansel Adams) while others enjoy objects like Weston. (He also liked portraits of people, especially his nude mistresses who doubled as models.) He worked with large format cameras where he would disappear under the black cloth while he labored to get the perfect negative and then the perfect print on paper. Art usually consists of some tangible result, like a photographic print, a sculpture or a pot fired by an Indian in New Mexico. That’s a pretty good definition of art. So if your child produces a finger painting, you can call it “art.” However, some art is better than others. That’s why my “art” (the dumpster in the Grove) can only be compared to Weston’s at a very superficial level.
But I’m not sure where you find the art in the digital world. Galleries often show digital photographs as paper prints hanging on the wall, So it’s similar to when traditional negatives were used to make prints except the hands-on craftsmanship found in the dark room is now gone.
As for the dumpster in Ocean Grove, I think I liked the colors and lighting at least as much as the object. The dumpster looks noble to me sitting proudly under the setting sun. I see nothing deeper than that. But the thing about art is that anyone can look at it and derive their own interpretations. The best art lends itself to that.
I rarely make prints or work in the darkroom anymore. My images hang very nicely on the computer screen. And sometimes I have a lab produce black and white prints that are quite good.
I’m happy with that, but others will continue the pursuit of crafting wonderful works of art in the darkroom on paper. Students are still learning how to do that including trying processes that were used over a hundred years ago, like platinum printing.
So if any of you create good art, send it to Blogfinger to be considered for our digital gallery.
ELLIS MARSALIS QUARTET. Recorded in New Orleans
Posted in Ocean Grove events, Ocean Grove Great Auditorium, Photography: Nocturnal Ocean Grove, Photography: Ocean Grove Gallery on July 12, 2019| 1 Comment »
By Paul Goldfinger, Editor @Blogfinger.net. 2017 Re-post.
It was cool and breezy during the Atlantic Wind Ensemble concert on Saturday night, May 27, 2017–Memorial Day weekend in Ocean Grove, NJ.
The band entertained a large crowd with a fine selection of music including Haydn, South Pacific, Dixieland, James Bond and God Bless America among others.
Outside, tent city was largely uninhabited, but one dwelling was displaying an American flag, and in the waning soft light of the early evening, with the doors of the Great Auditorium open, you could see that flag floating in the breeze. Its colors seemed dreamy–not bright like the usual red, white and blue display. In between band selections, I walked across the GA and outside to get this photograph. No one was around except for some ushers, but the flag seemed just right for Memorial Day and all it stands for.
The first number on the program after the Star Spangled Banner was a Spanish piece called “Amparito Roca.” Here it is as performed by the University of Illinois Symphonic Band.
The announcer said it was famous as a vehicle for dancing the Paso Doble, a dramatic and romantic dance from Spain, which I saw performed many years ago by a professional dance team at the Hotel Nemerson in South Fallsburg, NY. But the Atlantic Wind performance for this piece sounded like march music. So, naturally, I went home and Googled it. And, sure enough, it is both: march and dance music for the Paso Doble.
So here are Susanna Reid and Kevin on You Tube doing that dance to the music of “Los Toreadors” (Bizet from Carmen)