Seconds After the Decisive Moment
Monday, March 30, 2026
 | | Guanajuato, Mexico circa 1975 |
Lost & Found In the other blog today I wrote about having lost what some would call my signature shot. Now this evening I have looked at the negatives that were lost for a long time and found this one which I shot immediately after that first one. I don't think this one makes the grade and particularly because of the bit of wall on the right hand side. Just to show that one has to take advantage of decisive moments
Lost & Found
 | | Guanajuato - Mexico circa 1975 |
Photographers
have an advantage over artists who paint. I cannot understand how those artists
survive the fact that they no longer have the painting they sold. We
photographers even though some of us are artists (people tell me I am one) keep
that original negative, transparency or digital file.
So when a
photographer loses a cherished negative, slide or digital file it can be a
tragedy.
When we
arrived in Vancouver from Mexico City in 1975 I was not able to get a photo job
until the new French CBC TV station hired me in 1976/77. By 1978 I was gainfully
shooting photographs for Vancouver Magazine. I believe that it was around 1979
that I decided to have a show of my Mexican photographs. In those days
restaurants welcomed framed photographs. I had a show in a nearby restaurant to
Vancouver Magazine which was on Richards and Davie. One of the framed photographs
is what my Victoria friend Gerry Schallie would call it a signature shot.
I took the
photograph from the steps of the University of Guanajuato. I was able to shoot
it immediately when I saw the man because I knew the sunny 16 rule. I shot it
with KodakTri-X at 1/1000 at f-11. My camera was an Asahi Pentax S-3. The lens was a Komura 85mm F-1.8.
Until today
I can say I lost that negative. Today in my family files under Mexico before
1975 I found it and what you see here is scan that I did today.
I will never
understand Canadians who flock to Porto Vallehrtah (that’s how they pronounce
it) to enjoy a beach with margaritas when there are so many lovely cities with
culture, etc.
I am joyfull
today and I believe this may spur me to return to Guanajuato and take some
street photographs.
Palm Sunday - Coyoacán
Sunday, March 29, 2026
 | | Palm Sunday - Coyoacán - 1962 |
I met my
Rosemary in Mexico City on December 15th, 1967. We were married on February 8, 1968. We would have been married at least a week
before but every time we tried it the judge said he was not authorized as I
was an Argentine but Mexican resident while Rosemary was a Canadian tourist.
Finally when we were married my mother was not there. She lived in Veracruz and
she had travelled for our previous attempts.
The solution
was for me to go to the lovely Coyoacán neighbourhood with a bottle of good
French cognac and I bribed a judge who had his office in the city square. Since then Coyoacán has been a happy place in my heart
Coyoacán was
always an attraction for me. In 1962 when I was just starting to shoot street
photographs I had taken a photograph at the door of the main church in the
Coyoacán zócalo. What is interesting about the photograph is that if you look
on one of the corners you will see the points of a palm. I took it on Palm
Sunday.
Without
revealing my now true spiritual beliefs, I can state that my religious
grandmother inculcated me on the meanings of Roman Catholic doctrine. As a
young boy these beliefs were stabilizing. Years later when I was 16 who could
have predicted the lightness in my mind after going to confession? Confession
with a priest was like going to a psychologist and not paying a cent.
I will never
forget that a few days after Time Magazine’s Is God Dead cover on April 6, 1966
I was sitting in the Buenos Aires Zoo reading it by the tiger cage. I was wearing
my summer whites Argentine Navy uniform because some Admirals had yet to decide
if it was much too cold to change us to the blue uniform. Had I lingered a
while I might have run into Jorge Luís Borges who loved tigers as much as I did
and would often sit on the very bench I was sitting.
Perhaps my
world of comfort died that day that God died.
And That Hupil
Saturday, March 28, 2026
 | | Rosemary 1969 |
For anybody
who may go further than looking at my blog photographs and perhaps read their
content they might notice my constant reference to Argentine writer Jorge Luís
Borges. Of late I keep repeating how he often wrote that first times are
repeated as first times over and over.
 | | Photograph by Andrew Taylor 1968 |
Whenever I look at the framed portraits, etc. of my
wife Rosemary I am instantly taken to the moment where she is facing my camera
and I am about to press the shutter. This memory that Julian Barnes in his
latest book Departure(s) [no idea why he has that s in brackets] calls IAM or
Involuntary Autobiographical Memory is the pleasant but obsessive culprit. IAM - Julian Barnes
 | | 1968 |
Today Saturday I am a bit more cheerful as my ailing
Niño seems to be recovering. I decided to go to my oficina and look at a large
binder with most of the photographs I took of my family in Mexico. I was
looking for some particular ones and they were not there. I have a two large
metal drawers with files that I call Family. It was there were I found the
first photographs I took of Rosemary and also the ones where my Yorkshire
compadre Andrew Taylor took in colour of us with my Asahi Pentax S-3.
There were some colour negatives that I had not noticed before of Rosemary and a nutty one taken by Andrew of the two of us. In one the
photographs Rosemary is showing the beginning of that sad face she seemed to
use when she posed for me. I wonder what she was thinking about to make her
look sad?
Few people and even some photographers do not
understand the intimacy involved in scanning these negatives and looking at
them enlarged on a monitor. As you remove the embedded dust of years you see
things you may not have noticed before. There was this colour negative (I was
able to remove most of the yellow cast (age of picture?). What made me curious
is that Rosemary had this little wooden cross around her neck. Some photographers my age might know that when you have an old negative you put your finger on the side of your nose and rub the grease on the negative. Scratches and most dust will disappear.
Before we were married I took her, around 20 December
1967, to meet my mother who lived in Veracruz. On Mocambo beach I found this
little driftwood that looked like a cross. I immediately just put a metal ring
in the back and made it a necklace.
With the wonders of a scanner, just a few minutes ago
I printed the photograph, found the cross and scanned them together.
What a pleasure it is to combine the technology of the
past century with that of this one. The last two photographs feature the white bird dress that was Rosemary's wedding dress. Just a couple of days ago when I saw a photograph of a Mexican dress called a hupil I came to understand that her wedding dress is indeed a huipil.
The Solitude of not Belonging - Clarice Lispector
Friday, March 27, 2026
 | | Rosemary circa 1971 |
Of late I
have been re-reading the short stories of the Ukraine-born Brazilian writer
Clarice Lispector. She was a beautiful woman who objected to be told that she
and her writing resembled that of Virginia Woolf. Because we live in an anglo-centric
part of North America, feminist writers like Lispector, Argentines, Alfonsina
Storni & Alejandra Pizarnic, and the Mexican surrealist Elena Garro are not
well known.
It is
impossible for me to explain my daily life in which I miss the woman of my life
who died five years ago, my Rosemary.
Lispector defined her isolation:
Con el tiempo, sobre todo en los últimos años, he
perdido la capacidad de ser persona. Ya no sé como se hace. Y una forma nueva
de la soledad “soledad de no pertenecer” ha empezado a invadirme como la hiedra
de un muro.
With time,
especially in these last years, I have lost the capacity of being a person. I
no longer know how to do it. And a new form of solitude “solitude of not
belonging” has b begun to invade me like ivy on a wall.
This solitude of not belonging I expand by
saying that I no longer feel useful. At the very least I am useful to my cats
Niño and Niña and I will be useful to my two daughters and two granddaughters
when I am dead. They will inherit lots of cash and a lovely Kitsilano duplex
where everything works.
As I stare
of the photograph of Rosemary on my bedroom wall that has her signature sad
eyes look I have been overwhelmed by my stupidity in not having taken more photographs
of her. For years I photographed ecdysiasts and other women mostly unclothed in
my pursuit of the erotic.
The erotic
was facing me every day at home. How can one equate being in a tub with
Rosemary with our toes doing stuff, with anything else I might have found in my
photographs?
It is the
usual, when one understands the person with whom I could share that knowledge
is sadly gone.
At the very
least I find photographs of Rosemary that delight me that I have never printed
or scanned. This one I might have taken in Mexico City around 1971.
Harold Bloom & the Bishop of Hippo
Thursday, March 26, 2026
Turning into Lear Falstaff Reading Solitude Imperfect Sympathies
I have most
of the books by Harold Bloom. He is not that easy to read. He is extremely learned
and constantly uses words not in my vocabulary and writers and philosophers in
my memory. My two favourite books of his are ? How to Read and Why? and Shakespeare – The Invention of the Human.
The latter book was the bible that Rosemary and I would read before going to a
Shakespeare play at Christopher Gaze’s Bard on Beach. I was pleased, that like
me, Gaze had Bloom’s book on his night table. And of course both of us know that
Bloom’s favourite character in Shakespeare is Sir John Falstaff.
My current
Bloom read is his Where Shall Wisdom be
Found? I chose to start at the end
with Saint Augustine and Reading which contains a most elaborate and detailed
review of Miguel Cervantes Saavedra’s Don
Quijote de la Mancha. I have read that novel, a contemporary of Shakespeare, twice and I know that after this Bloom chapter I will have to read it again.
My
grandmother often talked to me about San Agustín and in my Catholic boarding
school of St. Edward’s in Austin I learned that while Agustín and Thomas
Aquinas are both saints they are considered to be great philosophers.
It was in
CBC Radio’s Ideas in a program dedicated to St. Augustine – Bishop of Hippo
that I found out a little glimpse of the man’s philosophy. He stated that when
you listened to music (atonal music was far in the horizon) you hear that first
note, in the past, the second one in the present and (most important) the next
note in the future.
Here is the
fine excerpt from Bloom’s chapter on St. Augustine:
It is from Augustine that we learn to
read, since he first established the relationship between reading and memory, though
for him the purpose of reading was our conversion to Christ. Nevertheless, I
read poetry aloud and seek to possess it by memory because of Augustine, and
like Hamlet I set the will above the Word, in conscious defiance of Augustine.
Shakespeare, in my judgement, invented the inner self, but only because
Augustine had made it possible, by creating autobiographical memory (read
Julian Barnes’s Departure(s) who writes exactly of that topic), in which one’s
own life becomes the text. We think because we learn to remember our reading
the best that can be read – for Augustine the Bible and Virgil, Cicero and the
Neoplatonists,to which we have added for
ourselves Plato, Dante, Cervantes and Shakespeare, with Joyce and Proust in the
century just past. But always remain in the progeny of Augustine, who first
told us that the book alone could nourish thought, memory, and the intricate
interplay of in the life of the mind. Reading alone will not save us or make us
wise, but without it we will lapse into the death-in-life of the dumbing down
in which America now leads the world,as in all other matters.
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