O U R S T O R Y
Any work which one loves brings with it a peaceful satisfaction for which no amount of repose and elegant leisure can compensate.
Imogene Cunningham
This is a family collaboration of select images and stories curated to entertain and inspire through our hopeful lens.
This website is dedicated to telling our story and highlighting the images taken from the places we have visited throughout my half century + of life. We have only seen a fraction of the world - so much more to see…
Some of these images we are proud to offer for sale - and some of them are old and merely here to tell part of our story.
The home page contains a complete set of the places we have been able to visit, and showcases photographs taken by all of us. In some places, we have only an image or two. In other places, we have full and large portfolios of images, and in most places, we have a handful of images.
The collection of prints that can be ordered along with framing options can be found in the STORE - opening in spring 2025. Or, feel free to connect with me (below) and inquire about anything or image you see on this site.
I never tire of seeing new places, to see the myriad of beautiful ways people live, where they call home, and what home means to different people.
I learned my love of travel and photography from my Dad, who has been incredibly adventurous his whole life - starting out on a European Journey at the request of Eleanor Roosevelt, when he was Student Body President of the University of Colorado, in the 1950s. (Read more about his story, below) At 88, he is still an avid skier, hiker, biker, and adventurer - giving my sisters and I as we grew up, the gift of respect and curiosity about the world, different places and cultures. So, this site includes some of his images and special stories of traveling with him as an adult, especially in China and The Caribbean. This site also includes stories and images from his nephew and my cousin Jeff. Retired from a storied career in the Entertainment Industry, he is a Peabody Award Recipient, artist and entertainer, and one of my best friends of my life.
Some of the places in this collection are extra special to us. One example is our China portfolio, that tells the story of our adoption of our daughter Anna Rose in 2006. These portfolios with a special story attached, are marked with a Star.
I am also including my other work as a photographer over the past decades including Portraiture, Florals, Product Photography and Interiors. These portfolios can be found in OTHER PORTFOLIOS
My life’s purpose has been to make the most of every opportunity - to explore our precious world - and to gather, nourish, support, celebrate, enjoy and love my special orbit of people that surrounds me. I am blessed to travel this beautiful miraculous journey along side of them, and I live in gratitude to them every day.
This is my life’s body of work and I Invite You to Know Us. Welcome.
Brenda Lush 2022
In collaboration with Husband Peter, Sons Derek & Evan, daughter Anna Rose Lush,
And - Father Richard Olde
More about my Dad’s Epic First Journey
In 1955 My Dad was the Student Body President of the University of Colorado in Boulder. At the time there was a tradition that the Governing Body of the University along with the Conference on World Affairs, would send the President of the Student Body to travel anywhere in the world he or she wanted, to study and then report on, student involvement with Politics, Economics and the like. The Conference on World Affairs was founded at CU in 1948 by Sociology Professor Howard Higman, and it ran uninterrupted every year since until the Covid-19 Pandemic in 2020. CWA was an annual conference, open to the public, featuring panel discussions among experts in international affairs and other areas, hosted by the University.
(According to Wikipedia: The total annual attendance of all the events at the 62nd Conference on World Affairs (in April, 2010) was estimated to be over 92,000.[9] Numerous distinguished people have served as panelists over the years, including Patch Adams, Margot Adler, Betty Dodson, Buckminster Fuller, Temple Grandin, Werner Herzog, Adam Hochschild, Arianna Huffington, Andy Ihnatko, Molly Ivins, Henry Kissinger, Charles Krauthaummer, Paul Krugman, George McGovern, William Nack, Ralph Nader, Howard Nemerov, Yitzhak Rabin, Eleanor Roosevelt, Seth Shostak, Julia Sweeney, Studs Terkel, and Ted Turner.[10])
In 1955 one of the CWA Panelists was Eleanor Roosevelt - who had a storied career after serving as First Lady including being appointed by President Truman as a delegate to the UN General Assembly where she was the first chairperson on the United Nations Commission on Human Rights from 1946-1953. She also addressed the Democratic National Conventions in 1952 and 1956. “She was the most admired living woman, according to Gallup's most admired man and woman poll of Americans, every year between 1948 (the poll's inception) to 1961 (the last poll before her death) except 1951” (Incidentally, Eleanor’s granddaughter Chandler was a student at CU at the time, and Dad takes pride in the fact that his room mate at the time was “pinned” to Chandler : )
This being Dad’s graduating year he was selected for the Goodwill trip to Europe, and was given a private hour-long meeting with Eleanor Roosevelt which he still remembers vividly today. The purpose of their meeting was to get her advice on where it would be the most productive and informative for him to travel. (However, she began the meeting by revealing to Dad how much she hated Joe McCarthy and how she was focused on bringing him down by “baiting him”…) But once they got back to the topic at hand, without hesitation, she advised he travel to the Middle East “Because that is the region that will determine the course of History, for the next fifty to one hundred years.” She promised Dad she would set up meetings with the Ambassadors to Israel and the Ambassador to Lebanon, in Paris. Meetings that indeed took place.
His trip began in Holland, then Paris and on for three weeks in Cairo and Alexandria Egypt, then to Beirut, Lebanon and Syria. Dad reflects now on the reason he felt mildly unsafe in his Paris meetings with the Ambassadors to Israel and Lebanon, as there, he was asked to pass “coded verbal messages” to certain people in their countries. He remains convinced today he was acting as an unknowing spy - something he feels he was convinced to do for them out of Naivete. In Alexandria he was followed by secret service because they believed his notes were being searched. He was advised by them to “leave a string” on his notes, to see if it was disturbed and it indeed was.
However, fortunately Dad remained safe and the trip was without further incident. His trip was fruitful and he was able to visit his brother Bud in Heidelberg Germany and travel to Salzburg Austria to attend a conference at the Schlossburg Castle where they hosted up and coming young leaders all over Europe for US International Relations. In total the trip was 90 days and he came home to write his Report for the University and give a speech on it at Mackey Auditorium. He also presented it at a Minneapolis Convention of the National Student Association.