The Conscious Thoughts of a Portrait Photographer
Monday, July 14, 2025
 | Mocambo, Veracruz, circa 20 December 1967 |
Of late I have been giving the subject of what thought is a
thought. We often say to ourselves, “I think I am going to sleep now.” That
action is obviously a conscious thought.
When I look at the portrait of Rosemary and me taken in
Mocambo Beach in Veracruz sometime around 22 December of 1967, is the
impression that immediately comes to my mind some kind of thought or is it a
different one? People who think of the past might have memories and they go
through them. In my case when I see this portrait, my memory is perhaps more
complete? Are the memories/thoughts of a portrait photographer who photographed his family extensively different?
My memory of my mother is also coaxed along when I see her
portraits on my walls.
After a 52 year marriage, my thoughts on missing the
presence of my Rosemary are constant. I cannot escape them, and I must admit I
do not try to escape them.
I have written about this photograph before. I will repeat
it again. I met Rosemary, from New Dublin, Ontario, around the 15th
of December, 1967 in Mexico City. By the 21st I drove with her in my
VW Beetle to Veracruz so that she would meet my mother. On 8 February 1968 we
were married by a judge in the historically lovely Coyoacán neighbourhood where
Frida Kahlo lived.
I cannot emphasize enough that this nicely framed photograph
in my living room is a result of:
1. I took the photograph with my Pentacon-F (purchased for $100 from Adorama in NYCity in 1958) which happened
to have a self-timer. I put it on a tripod and took the picture. The camera was
loaded with Kodak colour negative ISO 100 film.
2. Because my eldest daughter Alexandra, in the late 80s, began to nicely file my photographs, negatives and slides in metal cabinets, I
can find stuff. I was able to print this negative, quite pristine in spite of
the years that have gone by.
3. The technology of this 21st century means that
I can use my scanner to scan old negatives, slides and photographs. This I did
with my Mocambo shot. My Epson P700 is a very good printer and I happen to be a
good printer myself.
For a near future, once I have met my inexorable oblivion, my
filing cabinets will remain for anybody who might be interested. Meanwhile I
have stored all (or most) of my important digital camera and phone camera shots
in two exterior hard drives. Even though I know digital camera storage cards
can deteriorate with time I have them neatly arranged by dates in a box. I
never erase my storage cards. I get new ones.
This blog is the result of having looked at the Mocambo
photograph this morning.
My Mistress Tonight
Sunday, July 13, 2025
 | July 13, 2025 |
In 1962 Mexican president Adolfo López Mateos decided
that he wanted to be seen not only as a president but as a statesman so he went
on a tour of the orient. I remember distinctly reading in the important daily,
the Excelsior a shocking headline that the president had gone to bed with a
mistress in the Philippines. It was a sort of joke in bad taste as the mistress
in question was a pillow. Filipinos, to fight their stifling night-time heat, had
the custom of sleeping with a pillow between their legs.
Since I can remember I have always done that. As a little
boy I had a tiny yellow almohadita (little pillow). I was told my mother that
since I was growing up I could not sleep with that little pillow. But I
continued the custom always making sure my bed had two pillows. In hotels, when
Rosemary and I travelled, I always made sure our bed had 3 or 4 pillows.
Even when it is not hot I feel comfortable with that one
pillow between my legs that I then hug. With Rosemary now gone, that pillow is
awfully important.
Funny Botanical Nomenclature
Saturday, July 12, 2025
 | Rosa 'Ketchup & Mustard' & Hosta 'Wheee!' 12 July 2025 |
My Rosemary, whose interest in gardening transferred to me
(with some not so gentle pushing),
taught me from the beginning to learn the proper botanical name of our plants. Because
my first interest began with hostas I understood her. As a member of the
American Hosta Society I found out that my fellow members were finicky and persnickety
about using the correct nomenclature of their plants.
Another reason for using botanical names is that you are precise
and if you use a common name confusions happen.
And so the Western Red Cedar in our former garden in my mind
became a Thuja plicata. In botanical
names that has to be written in italics. If the plant is a cultivar (usually
because of human intervention and hybridizing) the name is not in italics and
it is between single quotes.
What you see in the scan today is Hosta ‘Wheee!’ and Rosa
‘Ketchup & Mustard’. Those names are funny and don’t sound as complicated
as the botanical name of a Douglas Fir, Pseudotsuga menziesii.
Rosemary was not alive to smile at the name of the two
plants in this blog. What is interesting is that the hosta is the first plant (anywhere
in the world) with an exclamation sign as part of its name. When I smell this
rose somehow my imagination makes it seem like there is some Heinz in it. Addendum: My friend Clarence Falstad, a member of the American Hosta Society who works for the very good Michigan nursery Walters Gardens and is in charge with patenting new plants has told me that Canada has rejected the name of Hosta 'Wheee!' because of its exclamation mark.
Pushing the Envelope
 | Transprency and Print |
 | Two Transparencies |
The term "pushing the envelope" originally
comes from the field of aviation. It is a reference to the flyable portion of
the atmosphere that envelopes the earth. Pilots would push the envelope when
they were testing the speed or elevation limits of new aircraft. The term
entered the mainstream by way of Tom Wolfe's novel The Right Stuff. For about 3 years I have been using the technique that I
call (with a smile) “Scanner negative sandwiches without mayonnaise”. I put one
negative, be it colour or b+w, or a slide, on top of each other and scan them
together with my Epson Perfection V700 Photo scanner. The results are
especially good if the negatives, etc are from the same photo session. Scanner Negative Sandwiches Without Mayonnaise I have been made aware that I can do this with Photoshop
Layers. I opt for the more mechanical one. But then, what do I do with digital
photographs if I cannot scan them and I will not do layers? In the middle of the night, one night ago, I had a dream
that started with “The Theremin Man”.
The Theremin Man is Stephen Hamm the former bass player of the notorious
punk band Slow. On the 10th of December of 2022 I was contacted by
Hamm who wanted me to take some photographs of him to help promote him. He
never did use my photographs in which I used my digital Fuji X-E3 and lit him
with my ProPhoto ring flash. Zemblanity, Serendipity & a Slow Christmas  | L to R - Christian Thorvaldson, Steven Hamm, Ziggy Sigmund, Terry Russell & Thomas Anselmi | In the dream I came up with the idea of making two inkjet
transparencies (slides) of two of the photographs and scanning them together
with one flipped. The I used another technique of printing one of them and scanning
it with the transparency.
I am happy with the results happy to keep on innovating
using the technology of the 20th century (my scanner and 20-year-old
Photoshop 8 ) with the advances of this century, my Fuji X-E3 and the
availability of that wonderful inkjet paper and transparency printed on my very
good Epson P700 printer.
Rosemary - My Mentor/Muse
Friday, July 11, 2025
 | Rosemary & Alexandra |
Sometime in the early 80s, Carole Taylor posed for me in one
of the corridors of the CBC on Hamilton Street. I pointed my camera and
thought, “If only she would tilt her head a tad to the left.” Like magic she
did that and followed all my other posing thoughts. For years I told everybody
she was the easiest and best woman to face my camera.
Tonight, now 11 July 2025, while in bed, I suddenly had the
realization that my Rosemary, just like Taylor, could divine my thoughts. I was
simply too blind to figure it out. The two framed photographs that I have
scanned together are some of my most favourite portraits that in Spanish we
call “instantáneas” or grab shots. I gave no instructions. In the Veracruz
norte (a big wind) I lucked out in 1968 with my Pentax S-3 and Kodak Tri-X. In
the second photograph, circa 1973 taken in Arboledas, Estado de México in our
nearby park “Los Bebederos” designed by famous Mexican architect Luis Barragan
I again just pressed the shutter.
Now in embarrassing retrospect I know that I never had to tell
Rosemary how to pose. I just waited and clicked the shutter.
Rosemary was the first woman I ever photographed nude. This
was in 1969. Then for years I collected photographs of as many women that would
face my camera with nothing on. Thinking hard, I now also know that I learned to be a good
portrait photographer because I had an excellent muse/mentor.
I will regret until oblivion takes me, that I never did
point my camera at Rosemary much more than I did. In Mexico they would say, “Alex
eres un pendejo.” In my Buenos Aires it would be, “Alex sos un pelotudo.”
Yes, to both!
And thinking hard I also know that I learned be a good
portrait photographer because I had an excellent muse/mentor.
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