My Last Shot
Wednesday, February 19, 2025
 | Fuji X-E3 - 18 February 2024 |
People say that Latin-Americans are more passionate. Perhaps
that is the reason why I am excited about photography even though I am 82. And I will not use that hateful word "still"!
I always abhorred the concept of using photography to
record. Sort of like a photographer I once knew who was recording fire
hydrants.
When I take a photograph I try to be original. A friend used
to tell me, “Alex, it’s been done before.” For a while I did not know what to
say. One day I saw the light and I shouted at him, “I, have not done it yet.”
I remember going to shows in that last century at the
fabulous Exposure Gallery on Vancouver’s Beatty Street. There was one
photographer who had lovely bodyscapes on the wall and told me, “Alex isn’t it
wonderful how a woman’s body can look like a Sahara sand dune?” I felt superior
as I had done stuff like that years before. Then I thought, “Alex photographers
go through different cycles in their careers. Few are on the same page. I must
be less smug as they will leave their bodyscapes and go to the next phase
whatever it might be.” The Mundane Bodyscape
And lastly I dealt with pushy magazine art directors in
Vancouver, Rick Staehling and Chris Dahl, and many good ones in Toronto. Their
mantra was that my photographs had to be either unusual or different. Invariably they were right in their suggestions.
Could it be possible to record a fire hydrant in a different
way?
While I am known as a portrait photographer, in Mexico I
shot lots of street photographs. With few instances I have not done that in
Vancouver.
Presently I am going berserk using an attachment called a
Lensbaby on my Fuji X-E3 digital camera. My friend Jeff Gin gifted me a wide
angle and telephoto attachment for it. Last night I decided to go to the corner
of Lougheed Highway and Willingdon with the setup. I arrived when it was
sundown. A Lensbaby in Venice
I believe that my photographs are indeed different. I also
believe that a photographer, just like a Wild West gunfighter, must be as good
as his last shot.
Rosemary,Two Hellebores & Ernesto Sábato
Monday, February 17, 2025
 | Left- Helleborus x niger 'Honeyhill Joy' & Helleborus 'Honeydew' 17 February 2025 |
Today marked a beginning in my Kitsilano garden. I removed a few dead
canes from my roses and some leaves. Then I noticed the lilac-coloured Helleborus ‘Honeydew’. Rosemary would
have smiled upon seeing it as she would have understood that our garden had a pleasant
future and that both of us would work at it to make it perfect.
At the same
time I remember a striking quote from my one of
my two (the other is Julio Cortázar) favourite Argentine novelists Ernesto Sábato. Until 1953 he was a
nuclear physicist who for a while worked with Curies in France. He lost his
excitement in the future of nuclear energy so he became a novelist. This
quote below (in Spanish) is important. I will do my best to translate it.
"La
fama es un conjunto de malentendidos, ya se sabe. Es vivir en una vitrina, y
para colmo desnudo, porque no hay desnudez más genuina y terrible que la
expresión artística, si es auténtica; toda obra de arte es una autobiografía,
no en el sentido literal de la palabra, sino en el sentido más profundo y
grave: un árbol de Van Gogh es Van Gogh, es su propia y desnuda alma ante
nosotros".
"That fame is a combination of misunderstandings is known. It
is to live in a glass showcase, and to make it worse, to be nude, because there
is no more genuine nakedness, and terrible, than artistic expression, if it is
authentic; all work of art is an autobiography, not in the literal sense, but
in the most profound and serious: a Van Gogh tree is Van Gogh, it is his own
and naked soul that is before us."
Somehow, if I am to understand Sábato, the scan here of
the two hellebores, and Rosemary’s framed portrait are Rosemary.
And perhaps even me?
That Curvy Brass Woodwind Dazzled
Thursday, February 13, 2025
 | Lana Victoria Lam - Piano - Michael Morimoto Alto Saxophone - 13 February 2025 |
Sometimes I define Vancouver’s cultural scene as sterile. But
I reconsider and believe that in many ways our city is avant-garde. That became obvius tonight at the West Point Grey United Church.
How is this discrepancy possible? With the death of our city
journalism and the CBC’s stress on bridge traffic, one of the few ways of knowing
what is going on in our city is through email subscription to friends in the arts. Note the error in the program. Allison Balcetis did not play an alto but a tenor. An thus I found out about tonight’s concert. I received a
communication from my composer and saxophonist friend Colin MacDonald.
It seems that every few years there is a conference in the
UBC School of music of prodigious Canadian saxophonists.
Before I delve into the concert, I do want to make clear that
not only am I an amateur music critic but in 1958 I played the alto saxophone
(and ancient silver coloured Selmer one) at St.Edward’s High School in Austin,
Texas. It seems that I was good enough to not only be in the school band but
also in the jazz band. After Texas I quit.
Tonight’s concert featured (is this possible?) and
arrangement of Claude Debussy’s Rapsodie. It seems that it was commissioned by
a female sax player who was deaf by the time, 20 years later when Debussy
finished it.
Just on that composition, had my friends of the Turning
Point Ensemble know about it, they would
have surely been present.
For me what was unusual is that Chinley Hinacay (a Filipino
cababayan of mine) played both the soprano and tenor saxophone. He would hold
one of them while playing the other.
When the well-dressed Kris Covlin played Charles Stolte's True Confessions solo piece I was into new territory. Colin MacDonald explained that all the
different sounds and dissolves were in fact clearly written on the music. There
were moments when a sound would come out and then Covlin would allow it to sneak
away into oblivion. Since I was on the front row I could hear those sounds.
Holly De Caigny, when she played David Lang's Press Release, I discovered that the composition had nothing to do with newspapers but about the saxophone action of pressing and releasing keys. Allison Balcetis, wearing a most colourful dress, played a tenor saxophone. I was blown away by sounds she
made by just tapping the instrument’s keys. She made sounds by overblowing, that
back in my day, would have shot me down by my band teacher Brother Edwin Reggio,
C.S.C. Last night simply revealed to me to what extent the music of the
saxophone has evolved into this century.
That is something that Colin MacDonald amply proved with his
compositions. While others tonight did fabulous arrangements, MacDonald was the
only composer. One was even based on an obscure pre-Bach composition.
Finally at the end, after all those dissonant noises (I am
used to them as I like Bartók) Michael Morimoto on alto saxophone and Lana
Victoria Lam on piano played a long and nicely sweet composition. I was able to
drive home without a care in my world  | Rose Yam - Chinley Hinacay & Matthew Robinson |
 | Kris Covlin |
 | Holly De Caigny |
 | Colin MacDonald |
 | Allison Balcetis |
 | Lana Vitoria Lam & Michael Marimoto |
Will My Alibi Fly This Century?
Wednesday, February 12, 2025
 | Lauren - 2009 |
A few years ago before my friend Mark Budgen (a paragon
of stability he was) died we discussed what was happening in the 21st century.
I had written a blog in 2009 (link below) and a couple more about the fact that the Reverend Charles
Lutwidge Dodgson (Lewis Carol) was accused by some in having an unhealthy relationship
with the young Alice Liddell. Budgen and I both new that he had never boated
with her without a cousin or friend companion of Liddell’s. We also knew that
in the second half of the 19th century, and particularly in Victorian
England, children were treated as adults and worked long hours in factories just
like adults. The Serious Ones No Smiles Between Child & Woman
I wrote a review in 1993 of Sally Mann’s book Immediate
Family for Celia Duthie’s The Reader. Since then, and particularly in this
century, her book has been banned in many US public libraries.
As soon as Rosemary and I had children, I photographed them
as they grew up. And when my youngest daughter Hilary had two daughters I
photographed them until they were teenagers. My profession as a portrait
photographer and my style involved them facing me with my camera at the same height as their
eyes. I was inspired by 19th century photographer Julia Margaret
Cameron as none of her subjects ever smiled. The photographs, I have hundreds, have this almost disarming serious
gaze.
As I understand, I was not criticized in that past century, as
I had the alibi that I was their grandfather.
Now in this century I wonder if that alibi would fly?
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