Photographic Time is Complex
Tuesday, September 16, 2025
When I look
at a photograph I have taken I believe that I see a bit more than someone who
has not taken it. And this is especially so if it is a family portrait.
There is
also the important factor that time plays in the taking of a photograph. That
first photograph that Daguerre took of a man having his shoes shined with what
looks like an empty Paris Boulevard is not so. The exposure time was minutes
long. Any movement behind that man would have been blurred. It has been said
that Daguerre paid the man not to move.
Shutters
also affect how a photograph is seen. Compur shutters like the one in Rolleiflexes
close to the taking f-stop. This means that the whole photograph is about a
moment in a precise time. Single lens 35mm film reflex cameras are not at all
like that. Depending on the focal plane shutter involved a slit on a curtain
(metal or cloth) moves horizontally or vertically. If you know that you camera
shoots images that are upside-down on a group shot that is taken from head to toe,
vertically on a camera like my cloth shutter Pentacon-F the heads of your
subject are exposed before their feet. In Einsteinium time the faces are older
than their feet. My photographs here were probably taken at 1/60 second.
There is
another facet of time that hits me as the portrait photographer when I look at
a portrait (two here) that I took of my Rosemary in Morelia, Mexico perhaps in
1969. She was
alive. She was vibrant. I posed her with not much instruction. I was learning
then. I was photographically unsophisticated. The two contact sheets have two different films. It would tell me that I
used my Pentacon-F and my other camera an Asahi Pentax S-3. By then I had a little lab in our home so I processed the film.
It is most
difficult to explain the feeling that I get that my Rosemary was a live human
being now gone.
Scanner Sandwiches
Monday, September 15, 2025
With time to
spare I have been revisiting some of my photographs. Because I have a good
flatbed scanner I like to sandwich two negatives or slides together. This
method works better if the pictures are from the same session.
I have been
unable to find any peers to show interest in this technique that requires having a scanner.
These two
sandwiches are of my friend Tarren a former ecdysiast that had and has grace
and good taste. The dog in the photograph is a stuffed one. He was very
cooperative.
My
photographs of all those ecdysiasts that faced my camera in the 80s were
patient as I developed my ideas making lots of mistakes on the way. These ideas
made me a better photographer.
Vittorio Gassman - Gary Regester & a Chimera
My favourite portrait of Vittorio Gassman was the one top right in the contact sheet. It was the first photograph Around 1980, photographer and mountaineer Gary Regester was up on a mountain in
his native Colorado. It was there that he saw a mountain tent. By then these
tents did not have wooden poles, etc. They were held up by fiberglass poles. It was at that moment that
Register had one of those associations which I believe is one of the reasons we
are humans. From “a what if?” he designed what we now know as photographers’
soft boxes. He called them Chimeras. Before Regester the idea of enclosing a
flash inside a box to soften the shadows for portraits involved unwieldly boxes
made of wood. These Chimeras could be quickly unmounted and stored in light carrying
cases.
It was in the mid 80s that
I went to New York City. I quickly went to Olden Cameras and asked for a Chimera.
The man behind the counter did not understand. I told him to look it up in the
Olden catalogue. That Chimera and a few bigger ones have served me well.
In the late 80s Gary
Regester came to Vancouver and gave a lecture on equipment. He talked of a
tripod head called an Arca Swiss. I was impressed. I mentioned it to my
Rosemary who promptly gave it to me for Christmas. She spent over $600.
The Gary Regester Chimera
and his recommended tripod head where involved in one my most favourite
portraits.
I faced Italian actor
Vittorio Gassman on January 6, 1991. I set up my medium format Mamiya RB-67 on
the tripod and had two lights. One was a small Chimera and the other was a hair
light. I focused my camera. It was then that Gassman told me he was going to
think what he was going to do and closed his eyes. I immediately took the
picture which was the first and the best of the 11I took.
There are some
photographers that would state that a large camera on a tripod is a slow setup.
I don’t believe I would have taken that photograph if I had had a 35mm camera
in hand. The stationary setup enabled me to take that picture the second I saw
it.
Yesterday I called Gary
Regester to thank him for his inspiration and for teaching me something about
associating two disparate objects (the mountain tent that led to his Chimera).
He was gracious. I call this sort of thing that I have been doing a lot of
recently “tying up loose ends" which is a very good American expression.
Wonderful Unpredictability
Sunday, September 14, 2025
 | Tarren |
My grandmother often told me, “Cuando el diablo no
tiene nada que hacer, con el rabo espanta moscas.” “When the devil has nothing to do he
swats flies with his tail.”
I am 83 and
I have no financial worries thanks to my brilliant Rosemary. I wake up in the
morning early and feed my two cats. I come back up to the bed with my breakfast
tray and read the New York Times (delivered at my door every day) and the thin Vancouver Sun. Because I really have nothing to do for the rest of the day, except
walk Niño or bike, I stay in bed to bed rot. I do lots of thinking.
Today I
prepared a cottage pie as my youngest daughter. Hilary is coming for a visit.
Then on a lark (because I can, like that American dog) I pulled out the very
thick file on my ex ecdysiast friend Tarren. I can ascertain here, as I have in
the past, that she has been (and is) the only woman with that spark of womanly grace
and beauty that ever competed with that of my Rosemary.
I knew which
negative I wanted to re-visit. It is one that I did in a session where I shot
bodyscapes (something that I would not ever do again) and one of the preliminary
ones had some sort of either a light leak or film advancing problem. In praise of the mundane bodyscape
Many ask me
what the difference between film photography and digital photography is. My
answer is one word, “unpredictability”. This 35 mm Kodak Tri-X frame was random
and unexpected.
And because, while I am not the devil, I can still swat photographic flies with my scanner.
Nostalgia - In the Colour of the Eyes
Saturday, September 13, 2025
 | Rosemary and Alexandra at the Museum of Anthropology - Mexico - 1968 |
"Se puede matar todo menos la nostalgia, la
llevamos en el color de los ojos, en cada amor, en todo lo que profundamente atormenta
y desata y engaña".
Julio
Cortázar
“You can
kill everything except nostalgia, we have it in the colour of our eyes, in
every love, and in everything that profoundly torments us, unleashes, and
cheats.”[my translation]
The
Brazilians have a lovely word for nostalgia, saudade. I was much too dense to
figure out until the end of the 20th century that in order to have
nostalgia for a place you have to be in another place.
My nostalgia
is complex as I have a nostalgia for the Argentina I left in 1952, the one I
returned for almost three years in 1965 and the repeated times that I went back
as a journalist and with my Rosemary and our two granddaughters. I have quadruple
nostalgia for Mexico, the one I went to in 1953 with my mother and grandmother,
the one I returned to after my four year period in St. Edward’s High School in
Austin, Texas and then the Mexico City of from 1967 to 1975 with my Rosemary
and two daughters. That last one is the many times that Rosemary and I returned
to Mexico sometimes with our granddaughters.
This idea of
nostalgia became strong when in the late 90s I met Argentine painters Nora
Patrich and Juan Manuel Sánchez. We had a large show at a Granville gallery of
our photographs, drawings and paintings that expressed our rosy nostalgia for
our Argentina.
What makes
my nostalgia especially strong is that my father was a good friend of Julo
Cortázar. Cortázar would come to our Buenos Aires home in Coghlan and the
writer would send me out to get him
Argentine cigarettes as he had a disdain for my father’s Player’s Navy Cuts.
And then there
is that Canadian nostalgia that somehow was unleashed right here in Vancouver.
Cortázar’s protagonist in his novel Rayuela (Hopscotch) is freezing in a Paris
winter. He buys a flannel shirt which Cortázar calls “una canadiense” Many of my photographs, especially my portraits are motivated by nostalgia.
Escaping Loneliness by Writing
 | George Waterhouse Hayward |
"Muchas veces me siento solo. Pero tengo amigos,
pocos pero buenos; tengo gente que me quiere. Y tengo además un refugio que no
todos tienen y es el hecho de que esencialmente soy un escritor. Mal escritor,
buen escritor, eso no importa. Lo importante es poder refugiarme en la
literatura, eso es lo que más me ayuda a escapar de la soledad".
Jorge Luis
Borges
Many times I
feel alone. But I have friends, a few but good one; I have people that love me.
And I have besides a refuge that not all people have, and this is that
essentially I am a writer. A bad writer, a good writer, that is not important. What
is important is to find a shelter with literature, that is what helps me to
escape solitude. [my translation].
It is a
paradox that my father was a journalist and all I have of him is a bit of his
signature on his King James Bible. When he died one of the items in his pocket
was his Libreta de Enrolamiento which was his identity document. I was too
stupid to keep it and I returned it to the authorities. It had his writing.
In a trip back
to Buenos Aires in the 90s I went to the Buenos Aires Herald where he had
worked as a journalist and found nothing in their files.
My mother
told me that my father was a good writer who would write pieces on Perón that
Perón did not like so my father spent weeks in a political prison called Villa
Devoto.
My mother
was a fine poet. I have a large collection of her poems.
Perhaps
then, I might have inherited something from my parents which is why I write. My
first article was a cover article for Vancouver Magazine in 1982 when I wrote
my experience of participating in a coup when I was a conscript in the
Argentine Navy.
After that I
often wrote for that magazine, for Western Living, for the Georgia Straight,
for the Tyee, for the Province and for the Vancouver Sun. I wrote travel
stories as magazines would save on that writer plane ticket as I was the
photographer and writer.
But it was
in 2006 when made my webpage that I started my blog. I was unsure what exactly
that was supposed to be. Since then I have been writing about my personal
experiences of my past but also of events here in Vancouver. To date I have
written 6618 blogs. I like to use the Spanish word for a ship’s log and I call
my blog a bitácora.
On of my
mentors from Vancouver Magazine says I am a lousy writer and that I need an
editor. I take Borges’s words that it is not necessary to be a good writer. You
fight and I fight solitude with my daily routine. That, my photography and
plant scanning keep me distracted from my melancholy in not having my Rosemary
with me.
I just wish
that somehow I could reach my father and ask him if I am that bad of a writer.
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