Your Feet - and upon the waters, until they found me.
Thursday, July 11, 2019
As a portrait photographer I am always centered on the face.
Other parts I usually ignore but I am
aware that hands are most important. I have a tendency to incorporated hands in
my portraits. Feet, on the other hand are so far away from the face that I
ignore them. If anything I believe (or used to) that feet are uncommonly ugly.
In particular the feet of graceful ballerinas are a mess. Few dancers will show
you their feet. I have been lucky (unlucky perhaps?) to have seen the feet of a
few famous ballerinas.
My mother had beautiful legs and feet. She told me that I
had inherited them. Some years ago on a travel magazine assignment to Florida I
had to photograph and write about an exclusive resort. I was offered either a
massage or a pedicure. I have always been shy about massages so I chose the
pedicure.
The pedicure gave me an opportunity to write miles of copy.
I was placed in a long narrow room with about 10 other women. They were talking
about intimacies that made me blush from head to feet! When the pedicurist
mentioned loudly that I had beautiful feet for a man of at least 60, the women
congregated around me and oohed and aahed. I kept blushing from head to feet!
As a dare a woman at an Exposure Gallery exhibition in the
beginning of this century told me, “If you think feet are so ugly why don’t you
try to photograph them and perhaps change your mind?”
This I did.
I found Lalita an Italian server at the Number 5 Orange. She had the body of Sophia Loren. I asked to photograph her. I took some photographs in my studio but then we went to Lynn Canyon. When I told Lalita's boss, Tony Ricci that I had photographed Lalita's feet he was incredulous. Lalita's pictures are in this blog. If you have patience and wait until the end here you can get a glimpse of the rest of her.
The basic unit of
measurement of accentual-syllabic meter. A foot usually contains one stressed
syllable and at least one unstressed syllable. The standard types of feet in
English poetry are the iamb, trochee, dactyl, anapest, spondee, and pyrrhic
(two unstressed syllables).
Así había
empezado a andar por un París fabuloso, dejándose llevar por los signos de la
noche, acatando itinerarios nacidos de una frase de clochard, de una bohardilla
iluminada en el fondo de una calle negra, deteniéndose en las placitas
confidenciales para besarse en los bancos o mirar las rayuelas, los ritos
infantiles del guijarro y el salto sobre un pie para entrar en el Cielo.
Julio
Cortázar
Your Feet – Pablo Neruda
When I cannot look at your face
I look at your feet.
Your feet of arched bone,
your hard little feet.
I know that they support you,
and that your sweet weight
rises upon them.
Your waist and your breasts,
the doubled purple
of your nipples,
the sockets of your eyes
that have just flown away,
your wide fruit mouth,
your red tresses,
my little tower.
But I love your feet
only because they walked
upon the earth and upon
the wind and upon the waters,
until
they found me.
Tus pies- Pablo Neruda
Cuando
no puedo mirar tu cara
miro tus
pies.
Tus pies
de hueso arqueado,
tus
pequeños pies duros.
Yo sé
que te sostienen,
y que tu
dulce peso
sobre
ellos se levanta.
Tu cintura
y tus pechos,
la
duplicada púrpura de tus pezones,
la caja
de tus ojos que recién han volado,
tu ancha
boca de fruta,
tu
cabellera roja,
pequeña
torre mía.
Pero no
amo tus pies
sino
porque anduvieron
sobre la
tierra y sobre
el
viento y sobre el agua,
hasta
que me encontraron