I’ve gotten into this groove lately of visiting the woods and just
sitting down and being still, staring at trees, and then getting up and seeing
what happens. These prints are
some of the fruits my labor of doing nothing. I made them using a process called
the cyanotype, which is basically a blue dye with sensitizer in it that you can
use to print on just about any surface using larger negatives. They are from my
infinite work in progress on street kids and substance use, Golden Gate Park, and the incredible
contrast within our city. These are some I've done so far. The working title is “Specimens.”
Twelve Hours of Sunset
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Friday, April 13, 2012
My friend Cam
This is Cam. He is my friend. He has a lot to say about the big topics in life: death, love, friendship, betrayal, freedom, bondage, and psychedelics. We sometimes have a lot of fun together, but other times I let myself get dragged into the dumps when I'm with him. He used to live in Asheville, NC, and practiced medicine and made a lot of money. Now he lives on the streets of San Francisco and shoots heroin. I've been photographing him for over a year and I'm not really sure what to say about him. I've tried to write about him many times but all that comes out is, blah blah blah. Totally useless words. He is larger than life, and we once went to the beach and watched the sunset together. Another time, I allowed him to smoke crack in my car. I'm really not sure what will happen to him, and I want to tell his story.
Waiting for his man.
Christmas Eve.
Sleeping.
That's the best I can do right now, Cam. Love you.
Waiting for his man.
Christmas Eve.
Sleeping.
That's the best I can do right now, Cam. Love you.
Saturday, November 19, 2011
Oh Occupy....
It has been so interesting going down to the Embaracadero to take pictures at Occupy San Francisco. When I was at a workshop in Buenos Aires this summer, I showed my portfolio from my work-in-progress documentary project on street kids and substance abuse to a photographer whose work I really admire. We didn’t have much time together, but when I emailed her to thank her for giving me feedback on my work, she sent me a long response in which she explained her own beliefs and observations of the particular demographic of people I have been working with for the past year. She said she believed that we are going to be seeing more and more of this, a new generation of kids who have little or nothing left to believe in, where the old equations of so-called happiness and success are falling apart right before our eyes, and where the dissolution of our sense of security in our homes and our cars our marriages and our retirement and insurance funds will force more and more young people out into the street. I had been worried my project wasn’t “current” enough, but it turns out it couldn’t be more relevant to these times of great upheaval.
Fast forward a couple of months and look at what’s going on in major cities across the world-- probably the greatest movement of global resistance against the powers-that-be since the civil rights movement and anti-Vietnam demonstrations of the sixties. I have been taking portraits of occupiers at the Embarcadero encampment, and last Wednesday, when I entered the scene I found that a group of about 100 UC Berkeley students had somehow managed to break into the Bank of America building, set up a tent inside, and sit on the floor by the window while the riot police came in and arrested them one by one. I was pretty delighted to see a tent pitched in the Bank of America building, I must admit. Outside the police were lined up like storm troopers, trying to remain professional in their stoicism while a couple of the protesters shouted at them in their faces the same things over and over again:
“Aren’t you ashamed of yourselves? How can you go home to your families tonight knowing that you did what you did? Do you want to shoot us? Go ahead and shoot us! How can you live with yourselves?”
What exactly what it was this particular group of police officers had done or were doing that was so upsetting? Beyond standing around?! I couldn’t help but chuckle to myself listening to these comments, and I started moving up and down the front line, trying to make goofy faces at the police officers to get them to crack a smile. Most of them continued to stare off into space, but I did elicit a smile from a few of them who I think could appreciate the absurdity of the situation they found themselves in. While I understand the rage that many of the occupiers feel towards the system, as I have felt it in my own life towards those who I’ve felt have wanted to stifle my freedom, I found many of these comments to be slightly ridiculous. For me, this movement is about taking back the democratic ideals of freedom, freedom to live the lives we choose to live, whether that involves being a police officer or living on the street in a tent. I am growing weary of the whole “with us or against us” mentality of some of the more vocal members of this movement. In fact, I find it amusing that those who were trying to blame and shame these police officers into “agreeing” with them are really doing the same thing that the capitalist systems have been trying to do to us for as long as they have been around—shame people into conformity—and whether that’s conformity to the establishment or the anti-establishment, does it really matter? Aren’t we really all in this together?
The evening ended peacefully, and it got me thinking a lot about what this movement is about for me: learning to see, as much as possible from where we stand, those around us as human, from the lowly police officer "just following orders" in order to feed his family to the infuriated college student who can't afford to pay his college tuition to the junkie who needs a place to pitch his tent. We are all just doing what we think is the best for ourselves. Indeed, that is what photography is about for me, and the more I approach the challenging situations I put myself in with curiosity, the greater my love--and my sense of absurdity--of my life and this planet and this race deepen.
Friday, October 14, 2011
Making Sense of Missouri
The Missouri Photo Workshop came and went like a dream. It was a suspension of everything in my life I consider to be normal and familiar. It was a shock, a marathon, a jump start, the kind of approach to learning that I am increasingly moving away from, but maybe still has some relevance in helping me understand what I want and don't want out of a career in photography.
Before I left for Missouri, I had a hard time easing into the idea of throwing myself into that kind of situation. Everyone I talked to who'd done the workshop said it had made them cry -- I was fine with crying, in fact, I enjoy the purge, the release of crying -- but I didn't want to feel beaten down, get the wind knocked out of me, like most intense and intensive educational experiences have left me feeling. I did a workshop earlier this summer that I walked away from feeling a lot smaller than I did going into it. I used to think this kind of boot camp experience was the only way I could be motivated to learn, but I am beginning to understand that my own desire to learn is really the only tool I need. When I want to learn or achieve something, the resources seem to sort themselves out.
Even after coming to that realization, I was nervous as hell the day before I left, having fits of nausea where I couldn't keep down anything I ate, thinking to myself, oh God, what if I can't pull this off? I'd applied for this workshop at a time in my life -- just a few months ago -- when I felt like I still needed to be pushed by others in order to learn anything or to get anything done. I had been accepted, I'd paid, and now I must go through with it and make the most of it. That night, I drove up to my family's house in the Napa Valley in an effort to calm myself, and ended up sleeping under the stars in a hammock in the middle of the forest. Somehow seeing the vastness of the night sky, which I'd felt overwhelmed and fearful of about a year ago, soothed me in that it helped me look at this workshop experience, however it turned out, from a greater perspective. If I failed, if I didn't find a story to shoot, if I didn't get along with my instructors, then oh well. Nobody would die.
When I arrived in Clinton, the trembling and nausea having stepped politely aside, I began to think to myself that maybe I was up for this after all. I met my other team members, my team leaders, or "editors" as they are referred to at MPW, Barbara Davidson and Dennis Dimick, and it seemed less daunting now that it was happening, now that I was doing it.
During my first meeting with my editors, I remember Dennis asked me what my background was and why I was interested in photography. Giving an answer mattered less to me than the fact that he actually asked me, and cared enough to listen to my answer. Few people had straight up asked me that question before, and it felt like such a relief that I didn't feel the need to beat it over the their heads, to justify myself. I explained my reasons, as coherently as I knew how, and they seemed to make perfect sense to both of them. Pretty cool, I remember thinking. I didn't have to work hard to be around these people.
I decided to shoot a project about coming of age in a small town. It was going to be a simple story, and I decided at the beginning of the week that I didn't care about impressing anyone with my ability to gain access to something deep, dark, and dramatic. Whether it impresses anyone or not, I've already done that, not to mention that I feel like I need more than a week to do that kind of story. I wanted to go back to the basics of good old fashioned storytelling: characters, setting, themes, narrative, and finding the visual cues to describe and evoke these elements.
The scariest thing about documentary photography for me is making initial contact with my subjects. But I did what I needed to do in order to overcome my fear, to make myself feel more at ease with the idea of gaining access to someone's most private moments. I rode a bike around town. I took baths. I went swimming and hung out in the hot tub at the hotel. I listened to Roy Harper and Joanna Newsom as I walked to and from the workshop headquarters. Taking my time to do what I needed to do to feel at ease in a potentially stressful situation helped me face my fears in a way that made them feel less like fears, or like chores, or like something I had to do for someone else, or "for my own good." And my story came together in a way I was reasonably happy with.
The most important lesson I learned from this workshop was that I need to feel good in order to want to photograph, to feel inspired to get myself out the door, and to make pictures that I feel happy about. I now am beginning to apply this to my long-term project here in San Francisco on a story that does happen to be deep, dark and dramatic. And so the journey continues...
Thursday, October 6, 2011
First Post, Third Blog
I think this is about the third time I have tried to start a photo blog. I remember doing it for the first time about a year ago, when I got back from a workshop in New Orleans with a photographer there, and I was determined to do all the necessary things to "put myself out there." Since I had no website, starting a blog was on the top of my list, even though I really didn't have much work I was proud of, nor did I genuinely feel that love of photography that has seeped under my skin over the last year, since I've gotten more "serious." I think the most important thing I have learned since then is that this profession, or passion--I am starting to make less and less of a distinction, simply because that distinction feels less and less relevant to my life--has to inspire me emotionally, intellectually, and spiritually, in order for me to A) make pictures that I care about and B) sustain me in my various photography-related practices, to feel like they are worth my while, from getting out the door to shoot, to digital workflow, getting into the darkroom to process, print, and scrutinize my film-based photographs, going to class, or doing things to promote myself, like writing this blog.
I am working on filling in some technical holes right now, from gaining a better understanding of light, design, color, the zone system (dear Lord...), to making friends with the studio, experimenting with different films, cameras, developers, et cetera. Sometimes the technical stuff starts to feel too much like work, and I get impatient, because I don't want work to feel like work. Tomorrow I have to shoot a gray card five times at different exposures and measure the density of the film. How can I make this interesting to myself? I think the answer lies in one of the reasons I am attracted to such a technical art form in the first place: paradoxically, it gives me pleasure because it bores me, and I appreciate the challenge of the boredom. It gives me the opportunity to slow down, breathe, feel things with my hands, look closely, cultivate patience, extreme patience sometimes. But it doesn't just feel like it's "good for me," like sitting uncomfortably in lotus position or imbibing foul-tasting medicine feels good for me--I am, on a good day, able to psych myself up about it enough that I enjoy it. On these days, I am able to allow myself to enjoy the weight of my camera, the satisfaction of loading film, tripping the shutter, the simple, visceral pleasures of the relationship between me and my camera. These small, simple moments are what, I believe, help me feel like I can fly when I am out in the field--help me achieve that unstoppable feeling like things can't help but line up in front of my viewfinder. That feeling, which used to be so rare but is becoming more and more frequent the more I shoot, is my only reason for continuing to photograph.
I want to write about my experience at the Missouri Photo Workshop last week, but I know that's going to take a bit longer for me to make sense of, let alone in writing. All I will say right now was that it was an incredible experience that there's just about no way in hell I would repeat, but I would recommend it to pretty much any photographer who really wants to challenge him or herself to move FAR beyond his or her perceived limits. This is one of the last pictures I took, of Tessa Bartlett and her father in the morning as he is taking her to school.
I have named this blog "Twelve Hours of Sunset" after a Roy Harper song that I was listening to when the idea occurred to me to start a blog again. Roy Harper's music helped me in a major way to rise to the occasion of the challenges of last week, along with being able to ride a bike around town, take little detours on my way to dreaded arguments with my editors, lie on cool grass while closing my eyes, and swimming at the hotel pool. Roy Harper was there with me through much of it, and I know he'll be there with me through so much more. Him and Joanna Newsom.
I am working on filling in some technical holes right now, from gaining a better understanding of light, design, color, the zone system (dear Lord...), to making friends with the studio, experimenting with different films, cameras, developers, et cetera. Sometimes the technical stuff starts to feel too much like work, and I get impatient, because I don't want work to feel like work. Tomorrow I have to shoot a gray card five times at different exposures and measure the density of the film. How can I make this interesting to myself? I think the answer lies in one of the reasons I am attracted to such a technical art form in the first place: paradoxically, it gives me pleasure because it bores me, and I appreciate the challenge of the boredom. It gives me the opportunity to slow down, breathe, feel things with my hands, look closely, cultivate patience, extreme patience sometimes. But it doesn't just feel like it's "good for me," like sitting uncomfortably in lotus position or imbibing foul-tasting medicine feels good for me--I am, on a good day, able to psych myself up about it enough that I enjoy it. On these days, I am able to allow myself to enjoy the weight of my camera, the satisfaction of loading film, tripping the shutter, the simple, visceral pleasures of the relationship between me and my camera. These small, simple moments are what, I believe, help me feel like I can fly when I am out in the field--help me achieve that unstoppable feeling like things can't help but line up in front of my viewfinder. That feeling, which used to be so rare but is becoming more and more frequent the more I shoot, is my only reason for continuing to photograph.
I want to write about my experience at the Missouri Photo Workshop last week, but I know that's going to take a bit longer for me to make sense of, let alone in writing. All I will say right now was that it was an incredible experience that there's just about no way in hell I would repeat, but I would recommend it to pretty much any photographer who really wants to challenge him or herself to move FAR beyond his or her perceived limits. This is one of the last pictures I took, of Tessa Bartlett and her father in the morning as he is taking her to school.
I have named this blog "Twelve Hours of Sunset" after a Roy Harper song that I was listening to when the idea occurred to me to start a blog again. Roy Harper's music helped me in a major way to rise to the occasion of the challenges of last week, along with being able to ride a bike around town, take little detours on my way to dreaded arguments with my editors, lie on cool grass while closing my eyes, and swimming at the hotel pool. Roy Harper was there with me through much of it, and I know he'll be there with me through so much more. Him and Joanna Newsom.
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