Posts Tagged ‘Street’

I’m kind of a book junkie. Boarders, Bookshop Santa Cruz, the Public Library* these places are like little dispensaries of crack for me. But not just any book. Ok, well just about any book. I tend to read in themes. For a while I was working my way through the collected works of the Puritan John Owen (16 fat little volumes in Elizabethan-interjected-with-Latin-footnoted-up-the-wazoo on the nature of humanity and the Puritan take on our communion with god). Another time it was all about brains. How the brain works, what is the difference between the brain and the mind, how the brain falls in love, etc. And of course there was the series on world history, evolution, physics. I read everything I could find by Wendell Berry** and I love Flannery O’Connor.

The point is I read a lot. I don’t know. Maybe I’m trying to make up for all the goofing off I did at KU.

When you read as much as I do you are bound to come across a ton of stinkers – or as a friend calls them “steamers” as in steaming piles of ….

So when I find a book that really resonates I slow down and bore into it. And I love that. I love finding a book, or any creative work really that I resonate with – that makes me think “me and that guy/girl could be pals. I bet we even like the same beer.”

Matthew B. Crawfords “Shop Class as Soul Craft: an inquiry into the value of work” is one of those books.
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I haven’t always been a photographer, but I have always been in the trades in one form or another. I’ve always felt like there are two ways to approach the trades. There are the guys (sorry, they are mostly guys) who don’t see it as a vocation and feel no fidelityto the work (Crawfords word) and there are those who do. I’ve never been the best tradesmen. I’m not the worst by far but there are some real masters that I’ve met and worked with over the years that have a kind of Zen Master-Obi Wan mastery over their particular specialty that at times can make you feel like a rank beginner. Crawford writes about the value of the trades and our need to return to teaching them as a valuable soul-crafting endeavor. Ever more so in todays out sourcing, pseudo-do-it-your-self-er times.

One of the concepts he talks about that I have believed for a long time but have never really been able to articulate is that of fidelity. In context he is talking about fidelity to the bike he is working on and fidelity to the customer who brought it to him for repair. He shares his struggle with wanting needing to do justice to the machine itself and repair it to it’s former glory Vs. his fidelity to not run up the customers bill and yet still do right by his customer.

What has this to do with photography? Everything.

When I’m out on a shoot my two fidelities if you will are to the image. I’m a photographer. I watch and plan and prepare all for what Henri Cartier-Bresson called the “decisive moment.” That moment that is so rare that arises and disappears quickly but that if you are attentive and prepared you can capture in the opening of the shutter. It is the moment in time that is essential to telling the story, expressing the idea, creating an image that resonates with the viewer. But there is also a fidelity I feel to my clients. I feeling that everyone deserves the best images yet not everyone can afford a photographer who can capture those images and tell their story. Which leads to a struggle with my fidelity between my art and craft as a photographer and my business as a photographer who has rent to pay.

I haven’t yet figured out how to bring those two fidelities closer into alignment.

Anyway. When I get all gummed up thinking about these things I find that going out with my camera and walking the streets hunting for images for no other reason than to make images helps to clear my head. Which is good because as a photographer you have to constantly be working on your craft, as well as shooting “just for yourself.” Doing so results in a further perfecting of your abilities, which should be a no brainer for anyone who considers them self a “pro.” There is nothing like just doing your art that reconnects you with your own true self especially if you’ve been doing to much thinking about the art. Or as Yoda would say “there is no try, only do.” Or something like that.

Following are a few images I found while on one of these little excursions. The first two are from today. The last is from a few weeks ago when I wandered into the local flea market with a 50 year old Rollei TLR film camera.

Buildings Abstract 1
Ford
Rollei Jeans

I can’t say that after finding these images I got any further along the path of reconciling those tensions I wrote about above. However, I can say that in finding them I also found a deep soul level satisfaction. And in the end that is why I’m a photographer anyway.

Hope you enjoyed the images,
Mike

*Until I got a huge fine and they wouldn’t let me back in.
**Highly Recomended

For a few years now I’ve been working on a personal project of sorts. I’ve been shooting portraits of the street performers, buskers, poets, and activists in downtown Santa Cruz. I have to say it has been a rad little project. I’ve used everything from digital capture, Holga, to medium format film. I’ve met some unique and beautiful people and captured some amazing images.

However, that project is effectively over. The Oh So Wise Santa Cruz city leaders who consider themselves good little liberals have enacted laws that have all but driven away the performers away. The intent, as stated, of the laws is to make the down town safer and more hospitable. They claim that the “street people” intimidate folks and harass them thereby driving away business. Really the law is aimed at the homeless who also scrape by a living begging for money/food/pot.

The laws make it illegal for anyone to camp in the city limits. The good folks of Santa Cruz don’t want to build any shelters because no one wants one in their neighborhood, so it is just easier to criminalize poverty. Another law forbids anyone from staying for more than one hour with in a few feet of any tree, bench, building, statue etc. This is the one that catches the performers. There are little ladies in yellow and blue jackets with “Hospitality” across the back of the jacket whose job it is to enforce the law. They drive off these malicious and evil doers who have the audacity to bring their art to the people. The fact that their tags label them as “Hospitality” is a Orwellian accident hasn’t escaped me. I witnessed one of these little ladies ask a man to leave because he was sitting on a window seat in front of a store. Of course the man was clearly a trouble maker. He claimed he was only waiting for his wife to finish her shopping inside but we all know he was really just a wolf in sheep’s clothing waiting to pounce on an unsuspecting shopper.

Any way, my rant, like my project is over.

Hope you enjoy the images as much as I enjoyed capturing them. There are plenty more where these came from.

This woman was among a group of Krishna’s going about doing what they do – you know, annoying people. I was about to pass them on when she began to dance. Mesmerizing isn’t the right word. There was a transcendence to how she moved that for most of her dance I forgot I had my camera. Lucky for me I snapped out of it and got some amazing images of which this is one.
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This is Jose Garza. One day he’ll be headlining a punk show, just wait and see.
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Curtis is on a crusade to remind the rest of America of our failure to rebuild New Orleans and to raise money for his home town.
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Of course no collection of Santa Cruz photography is complete with out The Great Morgani.
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Lyrical I is a street/beat/jam poet. A lot of people think they are poets, but this guy has a gift.
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Free Market Capitalism

November 3, 2009

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meet jeremy. he did everything right. he had a good job. he paid his taxes. he isn’t a drug addict or crazy. he is just another casualty of free market capitalism.

we will, at some point, move beyond ideologies that idealize the poor or demonize them. we will, at some point, no longer be able to see the jobless/homeless as “the other.” the other who must not have as good a work ethic as we do, who if they would just work hard enough they too could have a piece of the american dream.

or maybe not. maybe we will carry on the way we have and some will rise on the casualties of our battle for the almighty dollar and in process destroy not only the other but our selves as well.

god speed jeremy.

Photographing the Swiss Guard

September 20, 2009

Once upon a time there was a little boy who dreamed of being an accordion player. However, his dear mother wanted him to be a member of the Swiss Guard (the guys who guard the Pope).

One day when the little boy, who had grown to a man ran away from Rome in his Swiss Guard uniform and lived on the donations of passers by as a busker playing his accordion on the street.

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Shot in the middle of the day, sun high and to the left of G.M. filled with two strobes, one on camera and another hand held at about 1/2 power.

The Great Morgani is available to perform in any number of unique and odd costumes for your birthday, corporate and civic event and even weddings.

I don’t know what it is about the Bay Area but we suffer from a glut* of photographers. Every Tom-Dick-and-Jane with enough money for a digital camera is now a photographer. But that is a whole other discussion (don’t get me started on fighting with Uncle Bob & Aunt Jane at weddings with their big zoom lenses getting in the way).

One would think with so many photographers around it would be a snap to find a fellow creative to collaborate with.

uh, not so much.

So when I met Brandon while shooting our World Record Afro Wig Photo Shoot and he, like me, was down for working together I was stoked.

Today Brandon texted me to see if I wanted to head downtown and try and grab some portraits on the street. That turned out to be a bust as it was ri-donkulously hot. We did come across one of my favorite portrait subjects – The Great Morgani. I’ve got gigabytes of images of him, just do a search on this blog and he’ll come up. He is always patient for the camera and his outfits are so far out and well done you would be dull in the head not to photograph him.

Brandon has been wanting to work with me for a while to hone is off camera flash skills so we set up and started shooting away.

Here is Brandon.
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Here he is doing something artistic with a hole in a window.
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I read all the time on forums about how mid day sun is the worst time to shoot and how using off camera flash in bright sun is oh so hard. The key, they will tell you, is to get your subject into the shade. Failing that you have to get them to face the sun and hope for the best. This is all well and good but the problem is sometimes you can’t move your subject or to do so would ruin the mood. I of course didn’t know about these “rules” when I started incorporating strobes or flashes in my street photography. I had to try something else. If my subject is in direct sun with their back to the sun (most sane people don’t like to squint into the sun so they turn their back to it) I use the sun as a giant rim light and then my little strobes do the work of filling in the shadows. The result is the subject pops out of the background. I thought I was a genius for about 2.5 seconds for figuring this out then I found out it is all old school after reading about it on David Hobby’s Strobist Blog
**. Oh well. I love the result so who cares. I use this technique all the time in my street photography and as it turns out it works really well at weddings. I’m in Santa Cruz so I shoot a lot of weddings on the beach. Most of those weddings are right in the middle of the day with the hardest harshest light you can imagine. No one likes squinty eyes in formals right? But where are you gonna find shade on the beach? No problem I say. Turn your groups away from the sun and flash them – er, fire off the strobes that is.

For example here is a shot of The Great Morgani. Back to sun (cause, you know, duh it is bright). Pretty boring image. It is a snap shot and not that interesting.

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But add a little flash and the image comes to life.

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This was two strobes, one on camera and one in my hand, both dialed up a bit. Of course it doesn’t hurt that TGM is a real performer and with out any coaching from me through in that added bit of flare.

* glut is the right word right?
**seriously. if you are at all serious about photography and want to learn how to effectively use your flash you gotta check out Strobist. He puts all his knowledge up on the web for free.

I was downtown Saturday shooting, as is my usual practice and my favorite annoyance the Hari Krishna’s were out. “oh joy” I said to myself. I don’t know if it is their unintentional solipsistic mode of argumentation or the way that tune they sing always sticks in my head like a bad Jonas Brothers song that bugs me so much. or maybe it is because they just assume that because I’m bald I’m one of them.

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at any rate I don’t normally shoot the Krishnas because, well, they just don’t do anything all that interesting and if you’ve seen one Krishna you’ve seen ‘em all.

but there was this woman dancing to the side that was beautiful. “evocative” is the word that comes to mind.

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this weekend offered, if no paying gigs, a variety of interesting people to shoot. first my good friends Andrew and Holly were back in town from Berkeley. i shot their wedding in Aptos. we strolled down Pacific Ave for a bit catching up. then Andrew and my two votes for beers out numbered Holly’s solitary vote for hot chocolate so we wound up at 99 Bottles. i’m friends with one of the staff and she hooked Holly up with some hot chocolate she found in the back. so everyone was happy.

holly-and-andrew-1-6 Andrew is getting his masters, or PhD or something like that in advanced intelligence or superior genius or something or other. he is fascinating to talk and listen too. he also talks with his hands. despite how it looks he isn’t talking about a big fish that got away.

of course holly is simply amazing. this is her “Thank god school is out for the summer” look. she teaches up in the East Bay. they are both looking to move back down to Santa Cruz sometime in the future. which would be rad.

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earlier i captured these images while shooting down town

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Alexa from Chicago

May 24, 2009

i was just wrapping up a portrait shoot downtown when i found Alexa. she is traveling with a group of homeless kids. their van was broke down and the rest of the group were gone. i walked up and offered her a smoke and asked if i could make a couple of images.

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here you can see her dog. the poor guy was hit by a car recently. she doesn’t have money for food, let alone a vet.
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Weekend Images 5.17.09

May 18, 2009

i don’t know if it is the heat or what but there just wasn’t much going on downtown today. i did however see one of the rad-est, err, most rad ever tats…

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i was about to head back home when i spotted these kids…

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