Tied Up to the Yardarm on a Slow Victory Ship
Saturday, April 06, 2024
| 1965 - 1966
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Sometimes I believe that inanimate objects have free will. Ample proof is mostly
of the digital kind. Digital cameras and cell phones go their way without me
initiating their direction. It then becomes difficult to get them back my way.
I also
think that sometimes inanimate objects have a way of predicting the future of
those involved with them.
| ELMA Río Aguapey
|
After two years in the Argentine Navy I found myself broke
as my military pay was the equivalent of 2 US Dollars a month in Argentine
pesos.
Because of my over the top feeling of patriotism I had
decided to leave Mexico City and do my obligatory conscription in Argentina in
1966. I did not know that while the conscription in the army was one year I had
“won the lottery” in the Argentine Navy which amounted to 24 months. Another reason for my going to
Buenos Aires was to find my father whom I had not seen since 1953.
How was I going to get back to Mexico where I had lived with
my mother? I realized that if I initiated some sort of repatriation, the
Argentine bureaucracy might last at least a year.
Next door to my office with the US Naval Advisory Group
where I had been a translator and aide to the US Navy Captain, Onofrio Salvia
(he was Italian) there was an admiral by the name of Carlos Garzoni. I went to
his office and facing him I said,”Permission to talk to the admiral,sir.” I was
given permission. I then told him, “I have served my country for two years. My
home with my mother is in Mexico. I believe that my country has to serve me.” Garzoni
answered, “Conscript you are right.” He picked up the phone and talked to
someone. He hung up and told me, “Tomorrow
morning show up at the offices of Lineas Marítimas Argentinas (ELMA a then
Argentine Merchant Marine) they will find you a berth in one of their ships."
| Contralmirante ARA Carlos Alberto Garzoni
| I did. And a few weeks later I boarded (as the only
passenger) a Victory ship called Río Aguapey which was a slow ship that stopped
at every port in Brazil, Cuba, Puerto Rico, New Orleans and finally in the port
of Veracruz. The menu for lunch and dinner every day involved some variation of an Artentine steak.
I had no idea that crossing the Equator in 1966 for
the first time, involved an initiation/hazing ceremony. And so I was tied to the
yard arm, painted with oil paints, sprayed with seawater and had nasty bandages
stuck to my hairy legs. I was given a beautiful certificate that made me officially
a Tiburón (shark). The framed and lovely certificate is up on the wall to the
left of this monitor in my oficina. It was only about 10 years ago that I found out that my
Victory Ship (an improvement of the early WWII Liberty Ships) had been built at
the Burrard Shipyards! Edgar Kaiser’s father, Henry Kaiser had pioneered the building
of ships (very quickly) which meant that no matter how many of the Liberty
Ships were sunk by German submarines in the Atlantic many more took their
place.
For me that the Rio Aguapey was built in Canada is a lucky
coincidence. Or is it more?
The Human Face of Flowers
Friday, April 05, 2024
| Rosemary & Alexandra - Camellia x williamsii 'Donation' 5 April 2024
| | Alleyne & Barbara Cook - Rhododenron augustinii 'Marion McDonnell' - 5 April 2024
|
When I look at the new flowers in my Kitsilano garden I
immediately associate them with people. They have faces, faces of dear friends
and in most cases the face of Rosemary.
After a harsh winter my Rhodoendron augustinii ‘Marion Mcdonnell’
somehow managed to bloom. The plant was a selection of my friend Alleyne Cook.
He named it after our mutual friend Marion McDonnell who was famous for having
introduced to Vancouver the Blue Himalayan Poppy Meconopsis betonicifolia. Cook
was convinced his rhodo selection had blue flowers. Few of us ever argued that
the flowers were more on the purple side.
Rosemary’s favourite camellia, Camellia x williamsii ‘Donation’
is in full bloom. Were she around she would have smiled lots.
Here I have combined the camellia with a photograph hanging
outside my bedroom. I shot it at the Desierto de Altar in Northern Mexico on
our way to Vancouver in 1975. She is here with our eldest daughter Alexandra.
The perspective of the photograph has always wowed me as we could not tell if
the mountains were far away or that they were just low. Out of the frame would
be our blue VW Beetle.
All these years later I have a constant disconnection with
the idea that both Rosemary and Alleyne Cook were alive (Cook’s wife Barbara is
98 and I spoke to her today and she is just fine).
My guess is that most people these days have few family
portraits on the wall and they depend on a not often looked at family album. In
my situation, the many largish portraits on the walls haunt me as I go up and
down the stairs or when I stare at the ones in my bedroom. I wonder if being a
portrait photographer has its downs?
For me it all began in 1950 at the Lincoln Library in Buenos
Aires. I was 8. The library was run by the United States Information Agency
(spies!). I looked into an American Heritage book that featured dead soldiers
taken by Timothy O’Sullivan during the American Civil War. I stared at the
photographs and thought, “These soldiers at one time were alive. They are dead
here and they look much like the men walking outside on Calle Florida.”
I have never ceased to think about that hinge between life
and death.
Writing on Self-Demand
Thursday, April 04, 2024
Rosemary would say to me often, “You are bored. Go and write
a blog.” And I would. Now without her and 6062 blogs (including this one) later, I am
at it. My blogs, feeding my cats, walking Niño around the block, when weather
permits, and talking to my two daughters give me a reason to persist in my whim to
remain alive.
I have written before that I am not usually blocked in
writing every day and that in a past, when journalism was alive, I could have
written a daily column, no sweat.
Today I had to force myself to go to my oficina and think
(coldly) about a blog. I came up with this one as thanks to Bill Richardson’s
concept of Bunny Watson, I am able to bring elements together that do not seem
to have anything in common. Let me begin.
Sometime around 1977 Kodak introduced a Special Order SO-410
that was designed to be used for solar flare photography. Because this b+w film
had an unusual sensitivity to red, portrait photographers knew that the film
would make human skin luminous and facial flaws would be diminished. I used
this film with fabulous results.
Kodak noticed the unusual use of this film and re-introduced
it as SO-115. I used it with fabulous results.
Kodak was overwhelmed with orders for that film so they re-introduced
it as Technical Pan Film and offered it not only in 35mm but in the 120 format.
I used it with fabulous results.
In the late 90s we had in Vancouver a good photographic
gallery called The Exposure Gallery. They had themed/group shows. I
participated in all of them. One was to shoot with a primitive camera.
So I used a 120 film format German Gevabox. I called up
Virve Reid. I had photographed this lovely woman many times. She had been the
first Canadian Playboy Playmate with red hair. Amazingly a woman who now was
older and had a Rubenesque body agreed that I photograph her. And so I used the
world’s then sharpest film imaginable with the Gevabox. Because there was no
connection in the camera for flash I
darkened my studio, used the B shutter (the shutter stays open until you click
it for a second time) and shot my flash many times as the film’s sensitivity of
25 ISO was very low.
The result was a lovely photograph. My friend Ian Martin
chose the photograph to convert it into a photogravure. What you see inside the
frame here is Martin’s photogravure. Some years ago Martin disappeared into Washington State and my guess is that he is gone.
In my Virve Reid files I found the fax that I originally
sent to Ian Martin. The date is clearly seen, 01/28/92, time 10:48 in the
evening.
What is ultimately lots of fun for me (it is a wonderful
distraction to boredom) is to arrange the elements on my scanner to illustrate
this blog.
Of course I have to be careful in this 21st
century not to show stuff that would go against “community standards”!
Dance & My Two Left Feet
Wednesday, April 03, 2024
| Béatrice Larrivée & Noa Lee Ashkenazi - August 2023 |
One of my earliest memories is of my mother telling me that
when she and my father went dancing in clubs on Leandro N. Alem in Buenos Aires
everybody would stop to watch them dance the tango. “Alex, one day you will
dance as well as your father.”
That never happened. In high school in Austin, Texas, I was a
wall flower. Somehow I managed to have one girlfriend who did not mind my
two left feet.
Rosemary and I tried to learn the Argentine tango in
Vancouver. She quit because we were always in conflict as to who was the worst
dancer. I became an efficient ( and no more) tango dancer. My father would have remained silent had he seen me dance.
Our two daughters took ballet and quit. Our two
granddaughters stayed longer but quit in the end.
Ours is not a dancer family.
When I met up with Evelyn Hart in 1995 I fell for her and
for ballet. When our youngest daughter Lauren danced at the Arts Umbrella Dance
Company for 6 years I was given carte blanche to photograph dancers backstage
and anywhere else. I loved the opportunity.
I believe I became a very good dance photographer. It has
been in the last 10 years that thanks to my digital Fuji X-E1 and X-E2 that I
was able to experiment and perfect what I call dance swirls. Since I am no
longer working for non existing magazines I don’t have to take sharp
photographs to identify the dancers. But I have to explain that the dance system Gaga that these two dancers performed involves a blend of movement with theatrics. The expressions on their faces are important. That is lost in m swirls and blurs.
Swirls
Blurs
I think I am on a roll and at my age of 81 I am being
invited to take photographs at Arts Umbrella in May. This is exciting and I
think I feel a bit useful!
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