The C41 Café, Diane Arbus, Edward Hopper, Neil Wedman & a Smooth PowerPoint
Saturday, March 02, 2024
| Neil Wedman
| | Edward Hopper
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For an explanation on the why of the two pictures above scroll to the end.
Today I gave a Powerpoint presentation – Photography Inspired
in Art at the C41Café. The café is not big so the 28 people that
showed up was a crowd. But I have an idea that Saturday is not a good day for
this sort of thing.I called many people to invite them:
1. I am going to the Wine Festival, sorry.
2. I have a bad cold and so does…
3. I have a bad cold and so does…
4. Sorry I have covid
5. I had a leg operation, sorry.
6. I am going to the Vancouver Symphony.
7. Andy asked if Joaquin Pedrero was coming. “No, he is in
Mexico.”
8. “Is Charlie Smith who wrote the lovely piece about you on
Pancouver coming?” “No, he is in London.”
9. And so on.
I almost took this personally. On the positive side, the
projection worked flawlessly and Andy Wang is an expert at setting up. The
people were interested and a few questions were asked. Andy asked three
questions. He knows how to work a room.
For this experiment to work we will change the day and even
the hour of the next one. Because the Café needs to make money some sort of
payment at the door will have to happen. I know at least four photographers who
could give lectures. Could they be called Photography & Coffee?
Now I will diverge to point out that Diane Arbus had a show.
On the next day of her show the world was still the same. She popped some
barbiturates, got into a warm bath and slit her wrists.
While I am not suicidal, I discovered not “Post Opening Blues”
but something I call “After the Hanging Blues”. It seems to me that it is never
better than the moment before you put that last framed photograph on the wall.
I have had many of these. It is downhill after that. And especially as a couple
of days after the opening I might run into a person who I invited and did not
show up. The person will ask, “How was the opening?” I think but don’t say ----you!
I spent to weeks (they were awfully pleasant) working on my
flash drive PowerPoint. But after tonight, with nothing happening tomorrow,
Sunday, I feel empty.
The reason is that I must be a melancholic Argentine.
Had Rosemary attended the presentation with me, I would
now not feel so empty. She would have pointed out all my mistakes and offered
advice. The silence of the cats is deafening. One of my Powerpoint slides had the two pictures illustrating this blog. Some years ago, when I was teaching at Focalpoint on 10th Avenue, the bookstore next door, Book Warehouse, was closing. Most of the books had been sold but there was an Edward Hopper booklet of his sketches. I bought it. Inside I found Hopper's self-portrait. It was then that I understood that my artist friend Neil Wedman had been hiding from me for many years that indeed he looks like Edward Hopper.
Hyperbolic Paraboloids & Tomato Sandwiches
Friday, March 01, 2024
Today has been an up and down day that sort of finished
as an up one. It was not until early morning that I found out where my very
large files of Arthur Erickson had wound up. They had been stored at Leap
Creative (they celebrated yesterday!) and both they and I had forgotten them. I
don’t know how I could have handled the loss as I am the photographer that
photographed Erickson more than anyone. We were friends.
I cannot possibly forget how a few months before he died he
was sitting alone at a table in a function run by Diane Farris. Nobody wanted
to sit with him because he had Alzheimer’s. I went to his table and when I sat down I
said, “Arthur I believe that you may have been influenced by Mexican/Spanish architect
Felix Candela. He smiled. An example of a Candela hyperbolic paraboloid. blog
We then had an intelligent conversation for about 50 minutes
on the hyperbolic paraboloid. Think of the old TWA bulding in the John F.
Kennedy International Airport in NY>
A hyperbolic paraboloid is a three dimensional; double ruled
surface that is generated by two sets of parallel lines that are in turn not
parallel to each other. All cross sections of this paraboloid along the axis of
symmetry yield parabolas. Study.com
I will treasure our conversation until I meet my soon to
happen oblivion.
Tomorrow I am giving a lecture at the C41 Café 2948 West 4th
Ave from 6 to 8 on the theme Photography Inspired in Art. I am not int the least nervous so until the
lecture I really have nothing to do tomorrow.
As I lay in bed tonight with Niño (my male cat) on top of me
I felt guilty about not writing my blog. I was also hungry.
Many who may have read my blogs in the past might know that
with Rosemary now gone everything I do every day is in her memory. I like to
sort of quote St. Luke where Christ is parting bread at the last supper and
says to his apostles, “Do this in remembrance of me.”
Rosemary had curious eating habits. She had a fondness for
eating tomato sandwiches in the evening. So I made myself one and as I ate it I
remembered the love of my life.
She will be proud in my mind tomorrow when I give my lecture
although with her around she might have pointed out some of the mistakes I will
probably make.
The Teacher-Photographer at the C41 Café on Saturday March 2, 2024
Wednesday, February 28, 2024
| Left my daughter Hilary crying. She is now 52 - Niña and me
|
As an 81-year-old former photographer I tell people that I am
obsolete, redundant, retired and inconsequential.
C41 Café (2948 West 4th Avenue) owner Andy Wang
has made me feel useful. I will be giving a PowerPoint lecture this Saturday,
march 2 from 6 to 8. What is C41? (explanation below)
For a long time I thought I was going to die with what I
think is useful information in my head. Thanks to Wang’s enthusiasm for
photography I will be able to unload (impart?) some of it.
My grandmother, my mother and I were teachers. I did not
become a full-fledged photographer until 1977 when I got an assignment from
Malcolm Parry’s Vancouver Magazine.
I am, then, a teacher who became a photographer. As a
teacher it is my obligation to inspire and not to disapprove if someone does
not know that C41 is the Kodak chemical system used to this day, around the
world to process colour negative film.
The problem with many photographers, in this century, is that
they do not have the direction, nagging of art directors and designers that I had. These new photographers must
find their own way. On Saturday I hope I can help them find a direction to
better photographs.
The write-up that Pancouver Editor Charlie Smith did on me
is lovely. I worked with him when he was a writer at Harvey Southam’s Equity
Magazine (it was a business magazine). It was then that I noted Smith’s
astounding memory for facts, tiny facts that escaped most people. He became the
Editor of the Georgia Straight when it was still a journalistic force in
Vancouver. Smith’s ability to draw out information from, to us, unknown sources
makes him, in my opinion, the best investigative reporter of this city. Charlie Smith - Pancouver
It will be interesting to find out how many people will show
up at this Saturday’s lecture at the C41. Besides my PowerPoint I will have a
show and tell.
New York Times (now gone) columnist On Language for the
New York Times, William Safire said that any person giving a PowerPoint and
reading what is in it, would be defined as “Death by Powerpoint.” You will all
be alive when I finish my lecture. Charlie Smith probably knows what I know about Safire. He had a fondness and obsession for women that had ankles that he could use his thumb and index finger to "circumnavigate".
William Safire
Photography Inspired by Art at the C41Café
Monday, February 26, 2024
| Leonardo da Vinci & Robertson Davies
| I will be giving a Powerpoint Lecture at the C41 Café, 2948 West 4th Ave, on the corner with Bayswater, on Saturday March 2 from 6 to 8. My presentation is entitled Photography Inspired in Art. Why is this café called the C41? C41 is the universal Kodak chemical process in photo labs around the world to process colour negative film. The owner of the C41, Andy Wang, is an enthusiastic photographer who wants to make his café a Mecca no only for Kits residents but for photographers, too. A preview
When I was 8 in Buenos Aires I became obsessed with anything
that had to do with Leonardo da Vinci. I was particularly attracted to a red self-portrait
which I copied many times with red pencils.
I had no idea what an artist was. I was interested in da
Vinci’s experiments like his parachute.
When we arrived in Vancouver in 1975 I could not get a job
anywhere as a photographer. I remember going to London Drugs and talking to
someone behind the photo desk. The man behind the counter asked me what I did.
I answered, “I am a portraitist.” Aghast, he countered, “I got a master in arts
at Queen’s and I don’t call myself that!”
By the time I became a successful magazine photographer in
the 80s I always answered the questions on my profession, “I am a photographer.”
I quickly discovered that photographers who said they were
artists quickly became bitter at not being recognized as artists. In the many
times that I went to the Presentation House Gallery, Diane Evans and Miss Love
would introduce me to people there as the magazine photographer.
One day I asked a curator if she would pose for
me. Her answer was, “I posed for Manuel Álvarez Bravo. Why would I pose for you?"
By the end of the 90s I was participating in group
photographic exhibitions and in a couple of solo ones. I never sold anything
and my Rosemary told me I was spending a lot of money on matting and framing.
And so it went until I met Argentine painter Juan Manuel
Sánchez who at the end of the 90s was living in Vancouver. He gave me an art
education as I had never known that El Greco was a Mannerist. I had no idea
what Mannerists were.
Sánchez was the first person to tell me, “Alex sos un
artista.” I don’t worry to much about this definition. I keep taking my
photographs, portraits and scanning the plants in my garden. With my Kerrisdale
darkroom gone 6 years ago when we moved to Kits I have been perfecting (I am
really good at it) printing my photographs as inkjets in good archival paper.
Of late I have taken to task a friend (he is an artist) who
in his conversations with me often says, “Artists and photographers…” It seems
that we photographers are in another category. My friend counters with, “Must I
say engravers, painters, sculptors, etc?”
More than anything I just like to pull his leg. I don’t
have delusions of grandeur about being an artist although I suspect I will be
rich and famous when I am dead.
Einstein - Relative Motion & My Photography
Sunday, February 25, 2024
| K - 25 February 2024
|
Einstein's First Postulate
For example, a car's motion is measured relative to its
starting point or the road it is moving over, a projectile's motion is measured
relative to the surface it was launched from, and a planet's orbit is measured
relative to the star it is orbiting around.
I remember as a young boy in Buenos Aires being in a train
while another train, on the other track, was going in the same direction. If it
had not been for the vibration I would have affirmed that both trains were stationary.
It was Einstein who said that reference points were
important in order to determine motion.
As a budding magazine photographer in Vancouver around 1977,
I had little idea of what a good photograph was. The first art director I
worked with at Vancouver Magazine, Rick Staehling, bought many American
magazines like Esquire & Sports Illustrated. He would show me photographs
in them and would then assign me to take pictures inspired from what I had
seen. His inspiration and his treatment of my photograph can be seen in this blog. Stanley Park - Rick Staehling
I believe that in this century and it today’s date of February
25, 2024, that I know a good photograph when I see one. In Vancouver,now, that is
almost an impossible as I have lost my reference points. Journalism with
magazines and newspapers is just about dead.
One of my steady references is the NYTimes. I have had a daily
delivered paper subscription now for 25 years. That helps. But few of my peers
are “still” (I hate that word) taking pictures. The days of looking at a
Saturday Night Magazine (I worked for 3 of its incarnations) and being wowed by
a photograph are gone. Saturday Night Saturday Night & Gillian Guess
And so I must trust my own knowledge of what makes a good
photograph a good one.
Today I photographed a former student from 16 years ago
called K. She contacted me through Messenger (I had not seen or heard from her
since I taught her portrait photography) and said she wanted to meet and
perhaps take some pictures. This I did today.
One of the techniques I used, besides taking 120
Rollei Infrared film with my Mamiya (Will take the one roll to the Lab tomorrow), is
the ½ second slow shutter, at 800 ISO, with modeling light but no flash from a
small softbox. I further make the shot more complicated by focusing that Fuji
X-E3 on a large mirror at the end of my small Kits studio.
This is the second time I have used this method and it
almost seems too easy. Important to this process is the work I do in levels on
LAB with my 19 year-old Photoshop 8.
I particularly like using the mirror as it includes me. I
thank K and hope that she will be persuaded to pose again. I find her most
interesting as she is 56 years old. As the old man that I am, I can no longer tolerate
the perfection of youth.
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