That Symbiotic Relationship
Saturday, January 10, 2026
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| Baritone Tom Fox - March 2001 |
In this
century of emojification (my coinage) people rarely comment on what they see
unless it is a critical one. They post photographs and pictures in social media
without explaining why or how the image may have affected their life.
Because the
halftone process was not invented until 1873 photographs could never appear in
magazines or newspapers. You either held them in your hands or saw them hanging
at a gallery. Some appeared as photogravures in the front pieces of books.
The first
photograph that appeared in a now long gone NYCity newspaper was of the
Steinway Building. The photograph was accompanied by copy (writing). That
started a symbiotic relationship between photographs and illustrations with magazines
and newspapers.
In this
century that is being forgotten and many think that a photograph does not need
an explanation. Sometimes photographers who specialize in tight photographs of
bald eagles (this activity will disappear with AI) like to explain in great
detail the equipment that was used.
For me,
since I specialized in magazine and newspaper photography, the explanation for
my photograph was the essay or article in the magazine.
Now with all
those magazines and newspapers about gone how would anybody judged or comment
on the photograph seen here?
It is a
portrait that I took of American opera baritone in March 2001. Why is he
holding a ship’s wheel? He appeared in Richard Wagner’s The Flying Dutchman.
I easily
projected with my focusing spotlight a cloud scene using a metal gobo. But what
of the ship’s wheel? I went to the Maritime Museum and asked my then friend Jim
Delgado if I could bring Fox over for the photograph.But I must add that I had to take a grey background paper (large) to place behind Fox for my cloud projection. Luckily at the time Rosemary and I owned a large Audi.
And that was
it.
Daughtered
Friday, January 09, 2026
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| 9 January 2025 |
I do not believe that
there is an equivalent term, daughtered, to match mothered. The fact is that
this widowed old man is pleasantly daughtered by my two daughters Ale and Hilary.
A few years before
Rosemary died on December 9, 2020 we did lots of activities together. It was
important to have our daily breakfast in bed routine after feeding Niña and
Niño. Our breakfast (who cares about crumbs?) involved reading our hard copy NY
Times and Vancouver Sun. There was other obvious stuff we did in bed. In fact
we did this obvious stuff until about 3 months before Rosemary died.
Central to our life
together was our bathroom with its fine tub. We liked to use it lots and we
even indulged in bathing together. Our toes were important for this activity.
My daughter Hilary knew
that I liked to read books and the NYTimes in the tub so she bought me a nice
device that rests on the tub that can handle reading material and a large mug
of strong tea. After Rosemary died I relegated the device to one side of the
toilet.
Tonight when I noticed it
I decided to use it again. I was delighted by it, and now it will be a permanent
fixture of my daily bath.
While some might not agree
with my daily tub baths (unsanitary?) I have to explain that my Toto bathroom
facilities include a tub with a Jacuzzi. Using it helps relieve a lot of my
arthritis.
I take many supplements in
the morning provided by Hilary including fish oil for my joints etc. Thank you
Hilary for daughtering me.
Kidnapped Credibility
Thursday, January 08, 2026
“Humankind lingers unregenerately
in Plato’s cave, still reveling, its
age-old habit, in mere images of the truth.” First paragraph, first
chapter of On Photography
It was in 1978 that I discovered Susan Sontag’s book and I am constantly
going into it for fresh reference. A year ago at the lovely bookstore Nooroongji
in Granville Island I found a lovely little book by Sontag I did not know she
had written.
I am now re-reading it and I have come to the conclusion that it
represents all that is in her On Photography in a concise form. Through war
photographs she explores truth and credibility.
The photograph I have here I could tell you was a kidnapping I happened
to photograph when I was downtown one evening. Many might believe me. The fact
is that Harvey Southam’s Equity (a
fine business magazine that was) hired me to shoot a fake kidnapping. In all I
took a whole roll (36 exposures) of very fast Kodak b+w film.
To me the photograph represents Sontag’s point about credibility well
and were she alive she would probably write on how AI has affected the
credibility of photographs. Someone in the past century wrote that in court the
only kind of photographic evidence that might have been accepted was a
Polaroid.
Many of my photographer friends object when I tell them that a very
early version of AI was the first Adobe Photoshop that was introduced in 1990. It
was then that photographers could put penguins in the Sahara Desert.
I have written about AI in relation to photography here. I insist in
believing that portrait photographers with a personal style will survive a
while longer. I will not be around (happily) when that is no longer true.
Artificial Intelligence - My Take
On a Lasting Friendship
Wednesday, January 07, 2026
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| Maddalena |

In this century (I seem to start many blogs like this) I believe that
the concept of friendship has changed. Perhaps the covid epidemic made people
used to not having face to face conversations in cafes and relying more on
texting. I have written a blog on the excuses people give me not to talk to me
when I call them. Here it is.
Because I am 83 most of the writers and editors I worked with in
Vancouver as a magazine photographer are dead. Those that are not (and it
includes friends) they may have autism, severe mental problems, Parkinson’s,
dementia and many phobias.
There is one friend that is an exception. I first met Maddalena
DiGregorio on a 1970 photo session for a gay publication called Bi-Line. She
played Eve in a variation of paradise that had two Adams. From the point on I
photographed her lots until she left perhaps 18 years ago to Toronto and from
there to a small town in Northern Italy
We communicate and talk with Messenger. She is an active artist and
travels lots.
What was most interesting about my relationship with her is that there
was never anything inappropriate (nasty word) in it. Going to photograph
lawyers on my way home I might have rung the bell at her house and she would
have invited me in for coffee.
I remember years ago having to photograph a beautiful lesbian (for
Bi-Line) and having a drink at a café with her. I thought, “Here is a beautiful woman that is not interested in men. I don’t have
to prove anything. I can relax and just chat with her.” It was that feeling
that made and makes my friendship with Maddalena so special.
For all those years that I photographed her, because she was and is an artist, the sessions were really collaborations. We experimented. Take the two photos you see here. The photograph started as a b+w 35mm negative. I scanned it and put it on my monitor (it is a 22 year-old Dell). I then copied the image on the screen with my Mamiya RB-67 loaded with a Polaroid. The final result is that I again scanned that Polaroid and that is the first image.
Every once in a while we would go to Italian restaurants on East Hastings. Our favourite was called Carlucci's.
Opportunities Lost in this Century
Tuesday, January 06, 2026
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| September 1996 |
In that past century in
1996 my friend Ian McGuffie and I had a third photographer friend we hanged out
with. It was only when she was about to leave for Toronto that I noticed that
Patrice Bilawka was a beautiful woman. In that century you could approach a
woman you did not know with the line, “Hi, I am a photographer. I would like to
photograph you.” In that century my record was close to 100%.
In the case of Bilawka I
photographed her twice. She wanted to show all and this I did. I will put here
some of the photographs that would pass with censorship chaps.
It is difficult to believe
that a 35 mm camera (and in my case here a medium format one) with film (Ilford FP-4Plus) would
take me to such wonderful moments. While they are memories they are also had copy
b+w negatives. It happened.
This sort of photography
disappeared with black phones that you could plunk down hard when you became angry.
It was a better world. And
Bilawka is dealing with these present problems in Europe. She is a psychologist.
The photograph of Bilawka being made up is one of my all-time favourites. I was waiting in another room. My Mamiya RB-67 was on a tripod. I quickly slipped in a 250mm telephoto and knowing the approximate correct exposure took this and others, too.
Who Was Shakespeare? An Astounding Borgesian Definition
Monday, January 05, 2026
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| William Shakespeare - the Cobbe portrait - 1610 |
Porque Canadá y los E.E.U.U. representan una zona donde el inglés manda,
parece haber poco conocimiento de los escritores latinoamericanos como Jorge
Luís Borges.
Because Canada and the US
represent a zone where English is king, there seems to be little knowledge or
interest in the literature of the rest of the continent.
Mi conocimiento de la existencia de Guillermo Shakespeare comenzó en la
Ciudad de México en 1953 cuando yo tenía 1 años. Mi mamá, abuela y yo habíamos
llegado de Buenos Aires y rentamos una casa en la Calle Guillermo Shakespeare
en la colonia de Nueva Anzures. Cuando tomábamos un taxi le indicábamos al
ruletero que nos llevara a la Calle de Sha-ques-peah-rhe.
My first awareness of the existence of
William Shakespeare began in Mexico City in 1953. My mother, grandmother and I
had moved from Buenos Aires and we rented a home on Calle Guillermo Shakespeare
in the Nueva Anzures. When we took taxis we would tell the driver to take us to
“la calle Shawh-kes-peh-ah-rhe."
My favourite moment related to Shakespeare happened when I photographed
Kenneth Branagh after having seen his long version of his film, Hamlet.
Mi momento favorito relacionado con Shakespeare fue cuando fotografié al
actor/director Kenneth Branagh después de ver su película,versión larga, de
Hamlet.
Kenneth Branagh
Hace unas semanas mi hija Hilary y yo vimos la película Hamnet. Nos
encantó. Al verla y notar el actor con el papel de Shakespeare no podía parar
de pensar de la hermosa definición de quien era Shakespeare de Jorge Luís
Borges. No creo que haya una mejor que ésta.
A few weeks ago my
daughter Hilary and I enjoyed the film Hamnet. While watching the actor who
played Shakespeare I could not stop thinking on the beautiful Jorge Luís Borges
definition of Shakespeare. I do not believe that there is a better one.
Everything and
Nothing J. L. Borges
There was no one in him;
behind his face (which even in the poor paintings of the period is unlike any
other) and his words, which were copious, imaginative, and emotional, there was
nothing but a little chill, a dream not dreamed by anyone. At first he thought
everyone was like him, but the puzzled look on a friend’s face when he remarked
on that emptiness told him he was mistaken and convinced him forever that an
individual must not differ from his species. Occasionally he thought he would
find in books the cure for his ill, and so he learned the small Latin and less
Greek of which a contemporary was to speak. Later he thought that in the
exercise of an elemental human rite he might well find what he sought, and he
let himself be initiated by Anne Hathaway one long June afternoon. At
twenty-odd he went to London. Instinctively, he had already trained himself in
the habit of pretending that he was someone, so it would not be discovered that
he was no one. In London he hit upon the profession to which he was predestined,
that of the actor, who plays on stage at being someone else. His playacting
taught him a singular happiness, perhaps the first he had known; but when the
last line was applauded and the last corpse removed from the stage, the hated
sense of unreality came over him again. He ceased to be Ferrex or Tamburlaine
and again became a nobody. Trapped, he fell to imagining other heroes and other
tragic tales. Thus, while in London’s bawdyhouses and taverns his body
fulfilled its destiny as body, the soul that dwelled in it was Caesar, failing
to heed the augurer’s admonition, and Juliet, detesting the lark, and Macbeth,
conversing on the heath with the witches, who are also the fates. Nobody was
ever as many men as that man, who like the Egyptian Proteus managed to exhaust
all the possible shapes of being. At times he slipped into some corner of his
work a confession, certain that it would not be deciphered; Richard affirms
that in his single person he plays many parts, and Iago says with strange
words, “I am not what I am.” His passages on the fundamental identity of
existing, dreaming, and acting are famous.
Twenty years he persisted
in that controlled hallucination, but one morning he was overcome by the
surfeit and the horror of being so many kings who die by the sword and so many
unhappy lovers who converge, diverge, and melodiously agonize. That same day he
disposed of his theater. Before a week was out he had returned to the village
of his birth, where he recovered the trees and the river of his childhood; and
he did not bind them to those others his muse had celebrated, those made
illustrious by mythological allusions and Latin phrases. He had to be someone;
he became a retired impresario who has made his fortune and who interests
himself in loans, lawsuits, and petty usury. In this character he dictated the
arid final will and testament that we know, deliberately excluding from it
every trace of emotion and of literature. Friends from London used to visit his
retreat, and for them he would take on again the role of poet.
The story goes that,
before or after he died, he found himself before God and he said: “I, who have
been so many men in vain, want to be one man: myself.” The voice of God replied
from a whirlwind: “Neither am I one self; I dreamed the world as you dreamed
your work, my Shakespeare, and among the shapes of my dream are you, who, like
me, are many persons—and none.” From Dreamtigers,
by Jorge Luis Borges, translated by Mildred Boyer
Todo y nada – Jorge Luís Borges
Nadie hubo en él; detrás de su rostro (que aun a través de las malas
pinturas de la época no se parece a ningún otro) y de sus palabras, que eran
copiosas, fantásticas y agitadas, no había más que un poco de frío, un sueño no
soñado por alguien. Al principio creyó que todas las personas eran como él,
pero la extrañeza de un compañero, con el que había empezado a comentar esa
vacuidad, le reveló su error y le dejó sentir para siempre, que un individuo no
debe diferir de su especie. Alguna vez pensó que en los libros hallaría remedio
para su mal y así aprendió el poco latín y menos griego de que hablaría un
contemporáneo; después consideró que en el ejercicio de un rito elemental de la
humanidad, bien podía estar lo que buscaba y se dejó iniciar por Anne Hathaway,
durante una larga siesta de junio. A los veintitantos años fue a Londres.
Instintivamente, ya se había adiestrado en el hábito de simular que era
alguien, para que no se descubriera su condición de nadie; en Londres encontró
la profesión a la que estaba predestinado, la del actor, que en un escenario,
juega a ser otro, ante un concurso de personas que juegan a tomarlo por aquel
otro. Las tareas histriónicas le enseñaron una felicidad singular, acaso la
primera que conoció; pero aclamado el último verso y retirado de la escena el
último muerto, el odiado sabor de la irrealidad recaía sobre él. Dejaba de ser
Ferrex o Tamerlán y volvía a ser nadie. Acosado, dio en imaginar otros héroes y
otras fábulas trágicas. Así, mientras el cuerpo cumplía su destino de cuerpo,
en lupanares y tabernas de Londres, el alma que lo habitaba era César, que
desoye la admonición del augur, y Julieta, que aborrece a la alondra, y
Macbeth, que conversa en el páramo con las brujas que también son las parcas.
Nadie fue tantos hombres como aquel hombre, que a semejanza del egipcio Proteo
pudo agotar todas las apariencias del ser. A veces, dejó en algún recodo de la
obra una confesión, seguro de que no la descifrarían; Ricardo afirma que en su
sola persona, hace el papel de muchos, y Yago dice con curiosas palabras no soy
lo que soy. La identidad fundamental de existir, soñar y representar le inspiró
pasajes famosos.
Veinte años persistió en esa alucinación dirigida, pero una mañana le
sobrecogieron el hastío y el horror de ser tantos reyes que mueren por la
espada y tantos desdichados amantes que convergen, divergen y melodiosamente
agonizan. Aquel mismo día resolvió la venta de su teatro. Antes de una semana
había regresado al pueblo natal, donde recuperó los árboles y el río de la niñez
y no los vinculó a aquellos otros que había celebrado su musa, ilustres de
alusión mitológica y de voces latinas. Tenía que ser alguien; fue un empresario
retirado que ha hecho fortuna y a quién le interesan los préstamos, los
litigios y la pequeña usura. En ese carácter dictó el árido testamento que
conocernos, del que deliberadamente excluyó todo rasgo patético o literario.
Solían visitar su retiro amigos de Londres, y él retomaba para ellos el papel
de poeta.
La historia agrega que, antes o después de morir, se supo frente a Dios
y le dijo: Yo, que tantos hombres he sido en vano, quiero ser uno y yo. La voz
de Dios le contestó desde un torbellino: Yo tampoco soy; yo soñé el mundo como
tú soñaste tu obra, mi Shakespeare, y entre las formas de mi sueño estabas tú,
que como yo eres muchos y nadie.