Azar - Serendipity - An Ektachrome
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
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| 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
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| 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?
A Daily Reminder of My Rosemary
Monday, February 23, 2026
Julian Barnes - Death and the Lemon Table
These days I
am constantly affected by the current Reading of the Julian Barnes book called
Departures(s). All this is happening on the fact that since I read Jorge Luís
Borges poems and stories I am thinking like that favourite Argentine writer of
mine.
As I was
looking at the portrait of Rosemary opposite on the wall from where I lie on my
bed this Involuntary Autobiographical Memory (shortened to IAM by Barnes)
appeared. I immediately wrote it on the edge of my bedside NYTimes. I wrote –
It became and ended to begin again so that it ends to begin again.
This happens
a lot as Rosemary’s portraits are everywhere on the walls of my house. The
statement above is pure Borgesian as he wrote that all first times where
repeated as first times all over again.
The framed
photograph I took in the beginning of 1969 in Mexico City. I photographed her
nude for the first time and last (alas!). Looking at it I fall into it and she
is then posing for me and I click the shutter of my Asahi Pentax-S3. It is just
another and that same time all over again.
When I came
into my oficina to write this blog when I went into my drawer to get a ruler I
found this day-of-the-week-reminder that Rosemary had by her bed table in the
few months when she was ailing and then died on December 9 2020. The reminder
is in her clear printing and all I can do is to weep in my mind and be so glad
that we lived together for 52 years.
A Late Christmas
Sunday, February 22, 2026
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| Camellia sasanqua 'Yuletide' |
A Yuletide Memory Postponed
Time
confuses me as I thought that I had purchased a Camellia sasanqua ‘Yuletide’
just in the last four years. That could not be the case as Rosemary died on Dec
9 2020 and for at least three years before she would nag me in about the second
week of December to go and look for this camellia that blooms near Christmas. It
seemed that the camellia was not all that hardy and it would die.
This year my
camellia survived from last year but (a big but) it did not bloom until a few
days ago. Why would this be? My suspicion is that those camellias from the past
were grown in a greenhouse so they were forced to bloom earlier.
Whichever I
look at this I can only smile when I enter or leave my house as my camellia is
on a stone block outside. It has only two blooms. I cut them both for this blog
without having second thoughts.
This
camellia, like all the plants in my garden, have (flowers or not) the lovely
face of my Rosemary.