That Platonic Essence that Makes a Woman be a Woman
Thursday, February 26, 2026
 | | Anita - |
In my blogs
I often write that I studied philosophy in an American College in Mexico City. I
was studying to be an engineer (I failed electricity) and at the same time I
was taking philosophy courses with a brilliant mind Ramón Xirau. While he
started with Pre-Socratics and ended with Sartre I was quite obsessed with
Plato and his idea of a perfect world that our senses could never see.
A few years
ago because Rosemary and I had cats we had to constantly suffer their death. We
soon discovered that the fastest cure to the grief of a dead cat was a brand
new one. And, especially, if it was a middle-aged rescue from the SPCA. My take
was that the new cat inherited that perfection that all felines have that I
call “catness”.
Since I
began to photograph unclothed women in the late 70s until just about one year
ago, I realized that with the death of my Rosemary on December 9, 2010, that she
was the only woman I was interested in and attracted to.
A
photographer has to (that is my case) keep taking photographs. Since I have really specialized in facing my
camera on a person, I quickly discovered that I wanted to somehow get that
perfect humanity (that Platonic one) that we humans all possess. After all, if
I am me I cannot be someone else.
This led me
to the idea, that while I have most always taken portraits with a sometimes
severe eye contact into my lens, I had to go further.
Whenever I
now have the chance of taking photographs of a woman I want to get that which
she is and I am not.
In those
past years of my life in Vancouver I often got (they stopped about a year ago)
phone calls from women that I did not know who wanted me to take “different”
photographs of them. That was the case of a woman called Anita who called me in
2010. She posed for me twice. Once was in our Kerrisdale living room. The
second time, in that living room, and in my car, when she was visibly pregnant.
This century
has brought us Brazilian (as in no hair down there) pornography in Twitter/X.
There is a nasty profusion on red carpets and videos of women holding a mike to
their mouth, wearing next to nothing and then they move their rear ends in
every possible sinuous direction.
I see my
photographs with all those bits and pieces showing as less offensive and almost
elegant. They now do not follow was is called “community standards.
I looked
through my contact sheets of Anita and I found these two that would not offend
anybody and at the same time they show in spades Anita’s Platonic essence of a
woman. And to be clear if I were to photograph a trans woman I would do as here. Trans women, if they see themselves as women, they are so.
A Dream at the Marble Arch
Dreaming in
that past century was something that as a photographer and occasional writer I
could indulge with pleasure. I could go to just about any magazine or newspaper
in Vancouver and see the editor without previous appointment.
In that last
century I went to Charles Campbell then
editor of the Georgia Straight with the idea of doing a fashion spread with
story by David Boswell (he of the Reid Fleming The World’s Toughest Milkman). I
further suggested we use dancers from Ballet BC.
Because I
was a friend of the Marble Arch Hotel owner, Tony Ricci, we used the finest room
of this then sleazy hotel. People with keen eyes might notice that in the second photograph there is a framed portrait of Vancouver poet Michael Turner. A few years before, I had photographed him in that room with a beautiful woman in black underwear lying on the bed behind him. I had been commissioned by the Toronto literary magazine, Quill & Quire to take the portrait. As soon as the magazine was published, I received a phone call from the editor who called to thank me. He told me that my photo had elicited the first complaint ever for his staid magazine. Desire and Murder and Michael Turner at the Marble Arch
Boswell’s scenario
was about three women luring a man into the room and killing him with a snub-nosed
.38 revolver.
And so it
happened.
Azar - Serendipity - An Ektachrome
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
 | | Karen Kampbell - May 1989 |
Del ár. hisp. *azzahr, y este del ár. zahr 'dado1';
literalmente 'flores'.
Azar is a
lovely Spanish that when you see that z
you know that it comes from the Arabic as the RAE (Real Academia Española)
Dictionary defines that in its etymology. It means chance or my preferred
serendipity but its original meaning was flowers..
In May June
1989 my portrait of model Karen Campbell appeared in the Georgia Straight as an
Intro. Writer John Lekich and I had gone to see editor Charles Campbell and we
told him we knew this extraordinarily beautiful woman. We suggested that he
place it in his newspaper with a short accompanying essay. These became Intros.
Ours was the first.
In 1989 I
was crazy trying to imitate the Hollywood portraits of the 40s as perfected by George
Hurrell. This sort of thing involved many lights including a focusing
spotlight. Years before Angie from Beau Photo had sold me one for $15. In that
spotlight I would slip in metal gobos (go-betweens) that had patterns stamped
on them. In the case of Campbell I projected clouds.
I believe
that this is as close as I ever got to George Hurrell.
When my
photograph appeared in the Straight I can tell that the result was inferior to
my print. In those days scanners were still not in operation. The image in this
blog is one of the scanned b+w 6x7cm negative.
I started
this with azar or serendipity because I am doing my best of filing all
my photographs in preparation for my eventual oblivion. My daughters will
decide what to do with my extreme output.
Today I
found this single Ektachrom e under some of my Nikons. I have no idea how it got
here and no memory of ever taking any Ektachromes of Campbell. I must have
somehow copied an 8x10 b+w print and there were reflections. The slight blue
cast is normal for Ektachromes.
Perhaps this
one image leaves Hurrell behind and this is my own to savour. Something I must mention here how my program refuses to accept the existence of the word Ektachrome.
Death & Sancho Panza
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
 | | Abraham Rogatnick and his Murano glass | RucioRebecca & Dulcinea Barnes - Involuntary Autobiographical Memore (IAM) Un ruego de Sancho: "No se muera vuestra merced,
señor mío, sino tome mi consejo y viva muchos años, porque la mayor locura que
puede hacer un hombre en esta vida es dejarse morir...". Don Quijote de la
Mancha
A request
from Sancho Panza: “Don’t die your worship, sir of mine, but take my advice and
live for many years, as the worst madness that a man can make in this life to
let himself die…” Don Quijote de la Mancha
I cannot get
out of my mind what my friend, architect Abraham Rogatnick told me a few months
before he died, “Alex I am not long for this world and I am glad.”
In my
present isolation and loneliness, somehow ameliorated by the constant warm
presence of my cats Niño and Niña, I feel that I am waiting. I used to tell
Rosemary, “We are WTD (waiting to die).” I then modified that to PTD or
preparing to die. Because I studied statistics in college I definitely think of
my impending end constantly. While I am not yet suicidal I have wondered how the Canadian MAID
affects one’s life insurance.
My will
persists because Niño stares at me and tells me (in Spanish), “If you go first
who will take care of us?”
The above
quote of advice from Sancho Panza brings more IAMs because my abuelita who was
well versed in Don Quijote often told me stories about that great Spanish
novel. I read it because of her influence and then not too long ago I read it
again to find out what the name of Sancho’s donkey was. I found out that the
donkey did not have a name and was simply called “el rucio” which means “the
spotted one”.
When
Rebecca, my oldest granddaughter, was a young girl I took her to a play
inspired by Don Quijote. I was happy to find out that she enjoyed herself. Who
knows she just might one day think of me as I thought of my abuelita. She
inspired me. Might I inspire Rebecca to think of me when I meet my oblivion?
Un ruego de Sancho: "No se muera vuestra merced,
señor mío, sino tome mi consejo y viva muchos años, porque la mayor locura que
puede hacer un hombre en esta vida es dejarse morir...". Don Quijote de la
Mancha
A request
from Sancho Panza: “Don’t die your worship, sir of mine, but take my advice and
live for many years, as the worst madness that a man can make in this life to
let himself die…” Don Quijote de la Mancha
I cannot get
out of my mind what my friend, architect Abraham Rogatnick told me a few months
before he died, “Alex I am not long for this world and I am glad.”
In my
present isolation and loneliness, somehow ameliorated by the constant warm
presence of my cats Niño and Niña, I feel that I am waiting. I used to tell
Rosemary, “We are WTD (waiting to die).” I then modified that to PTD or
preparing to die. Because I studied statistics in college I definitely think of
my impending end. While I am not yet suicidal I have wondered how the Canadian MAID
affects one’s life insurance.
My will
persists because Niño stares at me and tells me (in Spanish), “If you go first
who will take care of us?”
The above
quote of advice from Sancho Panza brings more IAMs because my abuelita who was
well versed in Don Quijote often told me stories about that great Spanish
novel. I read it because of her influence and then not too long ago I read it
again to find out what the name of Sancho’s donkey was. I found out that the
donkey did not have a name and was simply called “el rucio” which means “the
spotted one”.
When
Rebecca, my oldest granddaughter, was a young girl I took her to a play
inspired by Don Quijote (see above link). I was happy to find out that she enjoyed herself. Who
knows she just might one day think of me as I thought of my abuelita. She
inspired me. Might I inspire Rebecca to think of me when I meet my oblivion?
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