Flattering This Old Man
Wednesday, January 15, 2020
Captain Beefheart in tweeds |
Soon after we arrived to Vancouver from Mexico City in 1975
I made a valiant, but ultimately useless attempt of getting a photography gig. The
last place I tried was the London Drugs photo department. The man behind the
counter asked me what my expertise was. I answered, “I am a portraitist.” In
sheer amazement he countered with, “I went to McGill to study photography and I
don’t call myself that!”
Since the beginning of 1977 I was hired by several local
magazines to take portraits. Through the years, art directors at Vancouver
Magazine, Rick Staehling and Chris Dahl gently (and sometimes not so) pushed me
into not falling in the rut of doing things in the same way. I tried Hollywood
lighting techniques (George Hurrell), dramatic grid lighting, natural light,
beauty dishes, etc.
Now as an obsolete, redundant, retired and otherwise
inconsequential former “portraitist” I have noticed a definite decline in good
portrait work with a definable style. At one time you would have known it was a Bert Stern, a Helmut Newton, an
Irving Penn, an Annie Leibovitz or a Richard Avedon. Those days are gone.
Don VanVliet
With Les Wiseman |
Les Wiseman, my former Vancouver Magazine collaborator (he did the
writing and I took the photographs) is the man that at one time I would have hired as my lawyer.
He often sends me examples of how people use the photographs from my
blogs. Here is one that I kind of like.
It does not take much to flatter an old man.
Another troubling trend is to be asked (often) to provide one
of my portraits for someone who has died.
I often tell people that I feel like Ukraine. This country,
perhaps because of a lack of high mountains, suffered numerous invasions from
west to east and vice versa. It seems that through the years, thanks to a then
healthy magazine and newspaper journalism many people passed and stopped at my
camera.