The Exploration of Woman
Saturday, October 27, 2018
My friend Ian MacGuffie often repeats something that fills
me with nostalgia for those days. He cites the photographers who would walk
around Stanley Park in that last century. Some may have had Nikons or Pentaxes
hanging from their necks. The more financially enhanced would perhaps have
Hasselblads.
Then this is what MacGuffie says that rings so true in this
age of proliferating images that are not here or there.
“We don’t know if these photographers were good or not. They
had few opportunities to show them anywhere.”
That 20th century was also one of black and
white, not only in photography but in other aspects of life. It seemed to be a
century of absolutes with no strange and confusing grounds.
I have an acquaintance (one I hope with with I will have a
friendship) who is a man who has changed her body. She has breast augmentation
and perhaps she may have had modifications below the belt. At one time, in that
other century I would have called her a drag queen. Now I am unsure as to the
correct nomenclature. Obviously it is not black or white. It has to be another “colour”
in-between or to one side or the other.
In that past century when I was a young man I could emerge
from the confessional feeling elated and purified. That would not happen to me
now. My beliefs have changed.
But there is one aspect of my life that is unchanged. Not
only that, it seems to be stronger, more in my face. My taste buds are failing
and there are few foods that please me. Of music I can only state that I do not
want to ever listen to Bach’s Double Violin Concerto. I am done. I am done with
it.
What is one of the few aspects of my life that is now enhanced and ever
present?
This is my admiration, attraction, confusion, depression,
amazement, wonder and many other emotions in how I relate to my visual
impression of the women that surround my life. This could be the women that I
know but also women who are strangers.
I am repelled by the Kardashian Factor which I define as my
reaction to a banal perfection of beauty that as soon as it begins to fade
surgery and other methods are used to freeze it.
I am instantly drawn to cleavage while being aware that I am
admiring a concavity that has no material existence. I am looking at a curved
space as difficult to fathom as Einstein’s space.
What is it about a leg or a pair of them that draws me to
stare? Why is it that those legs below a mini skirt are so much more attractive
(a beacon of sorts) than those seen in their entirety when the woman in question
is wearing a bathing suit?
And my attraction to women is not only of women much younger than I am. I see beauty in my Rosemary even though I can remember those legs and everything else about her that I first saw 50 years ago.
To me it is obvious that this attraction is genetic. It is a
genetic factor that makes the sexual organs (the exterior ones) of a woman so
fine and their male counterparts so repulsive.
Are women less prone to the factors in that previous
paragraph?
My Rosemary and I plan to travel more this 2019. Curiously
we want to return to some of our favourite places like Mérida, New York, Buenos
Aires, Guanajuato. Madrid while we have new interest in places that only
Rosemary has been to like Rome, Florence and Venice. Could it be that there is
pleasure in the predictable surprise of the surprising? There is no possibility
we will ever want to go to Ulan Bator or Delhi. Is cleavage while much less complex than a face different and new every time?
Could it be that my attraction to the female form be still
with me because I have good vision, and a memory that has yet to fail? I can
remember that scene in To Catch a Thief, where Cary Grant in a hotel corridor
spots Grace Kelly and that beautiful neck.
I can remember being 15 and going to newsstands in Mexico
that had magazines showing Brigit Bardot’s cleavage. If I had enough pocket
money I would buy them and smuggle them in back home.
I don’t have to ask myself why it was I liked to ride buses
in Mexico City in those days of my youth to spy on women who crossed their
legs.
In brief I don’t think I am abnormal or different from other
men.
What does make me different (and this is where the crunch lies) is that as
a photographer I can capture (this 21st century photographic term
has a good fit here in this usage) these memories and make them the realities
of the moment of women who may pose for me in my Kits studio.
I can thank my proto-feminist mother,
and my wife Rosemary) that I would never take a photograph where the woman
posing is not in control or doing something I have persuaded her to do against
her will.
In all these years where I have followed my star that is the
beauty of woman I have never really felt all that frustrated about my
photographs. I have shown (physical photographic prints printed by me in my
darkroom) prints to friends. I have shown in the many galleries that existed in
Vancouver before they became politically correct, shy and safe.
Now with friends that have died or disappeared or even
because of a mutually fading friendship, my opportunity to show what I do has
been diminished.
As the years in front of me become certainly short ones
all I can do is to look at my filing cabinets, know what is in them (my memory
has yet to fail me) and consider that I have had a life that is unique in what
relates to the exploration of woman.