About Me

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Toronto, Ontario, Canada
"To take a photograph is to align the head, the eye and the heart. It's a way of life." ~ Henri Cartier-Bresson
Showing posts with label Leica. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leica. Show all posts

Monday, May 7, 2018

Photographer Profile ~ Sergio Larrain

Sergio Larrain (1931-2012, born in Valparaiso, Chile) grew up in Chile but left at age eighteen to study at the University of California, Berkeley. Upon his return he began taking photographs in the streets of Santiago and Valparaiso; and the early purchase of two images by the Museum of Modern Art, New York, reassured him in his chosen profession.

 Impressed by Henri Cartier-Bresson's photographs, Larrain presented the photographer his work on los abandonados (street children in Santiago) during a trip to Europe. Cartier-Bresson then invited Larrain to join Magnum in 1960; around this time he also began what would become a legendary project on Valparaiso with a text by poet Pablo Neruda. 



London. The City. 1958-1959
© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos

London, England 1958-1959
“I saved my first money…and bought my first Leica, not because I wanted to do photos, but because it was the most beautiful object that one could buy (also a typewriter)… for the first time in my life, I had money to buy what I wanted.” – Sergio Larrain, in a letter to Agnes Sire, who was the desk editor of Magnum (Paris) for 20 years.

© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos
England. London. 1959.
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© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos
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© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos

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 Limón Soda, Valparaíso. Photograph: Sergio Larrain/Magnum
BOLIVIA. Potosi. 1957.
BOLIVIA. Potosi. 1957
© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos

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© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos

“Photography is a walk alone in the universe…The conventional world veils your vision, for photography you have to find a way to remove the veil.” – Sergio Larrain

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© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos
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© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos
CHILE. Valparaiso. 1954.
© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos
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© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos
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© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos
CHILE. Between Chiloe Island and Puerto Montt. 1957.


© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos
BOLIVIA. Potosi. 1957.
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© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos
“…People that do creative work, have to isolate themselves, they are all hermits, one way or another…Picasso would live in a world of happiness, with his children and women as you have seen…far from ugliness, sadness…” ~ Sergio Larrain
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© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos

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© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos
© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos
CHILE. Santiago. 1963.
© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos
 London, England 1959.
<div class="artist"><strong>Sergio Larrain</strong></div><div class="title_and_year"><em>Bar Los Siete Espejos (Bar of Seven Mirrors), Valparaiso, Chili, 1963</em></div><div class="medium">Vintage silver gelatin print</div><div class="dimensions">17.2 x 25.5 cm</div><div class="signed_and_dated">Dated in pencil on verso, various annotations in red pen and black pencil. Magnum artist copyright wetstamp on verso</div>
© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos
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© Sergio Larrain / Magnum Photos
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Sergio Larrain getting a shoe shine, London, England.


Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Photographer Profile ~ Lee Friedlander

Lee Friedlander (born July 14, 1934) is an American photographer and artist. In the 1960s and 70s, working primarily with 35mm cameras and black and white film, Friedlander evolved an influential and often imitated visual language of urban "social landscape," with many of the photographs including fragments of store-front reflections, structures framed by fences, posters and street-signs.

 Friedlander studied photography at the Art Center College of Design located in Pasadena, California. In 1956, he moved to New York City where he photographed jazz musicians for record covers. His early work was influenced by Eugène Atget, Robert Frank, and Walker Evans. In 1960, the Guggenheim Memorial Foundation awarded Friedlander a grant to focus on his art and made subsequent grants in 1962 and 1977.

 Some of his most famous photographs appeared in the September 1985 Playboy, black and white nude photographs of Madonna from the late 1970s. A student at the time, he was paid only $25 for her 1979 set, and in 2009, one of the images fetched $37,500 at a Christie's Art House auction.

Working primarily with Leica 35mm cameras and black and white film, Friedlander's style focused on the "social landscape". His art used detached images of urban life, store-front reflections, structures framed by fences, and posters and signs all combining to capture the look of modern life.


Self Portrait ~  Lee Friedlander, NYC

LEE FRIEDLANDER ~ Nude (Madonna), 1979
LEE FRIEDLANDER ~ Nude (Madonna), 1979
LEE FRIEDLANDER ~ Nude (Madonna), 1979
LEE FRIEDLANDER ~ Nude (Madonna), 1979
LEE FRIEDLANDER ~ Nude (Madonna), 1979
LEE FRIEDLANDER ~ Nude (Madonna), 1979

Self Portrait ~ Lee Friedlander








Monday, August 13, 2012

Photographer Profile ~ Bruce Davidson

Bruce Davidson (born 1933) is an American photographer. He has been a member of the Magnum Photos agency since 1958. His photographs, notably those taken in Harlem, New York City, have been widely exhibited and published.

Bruce Davidson was born to a single mother, who worked in a factory. At age 10, his mother built him a darkroom in their basement and Davidson began taking photographs. He was given the freedom to wander the streets of Oak Park alone. Soon after, he approached a local photographer who taught him the technical nuances of photography, in addition to lighting and printing skills. In his mid-teens, Davidson began to ride Chicago’s elevated train system into the city, exploring neighborhoods and the Chicago Loop, observing wide varieties of people, and most importantly developing skills and interests that would be seen in his later photographic works.

At 16, Davidson won his first major photography award, the Kodak National High School snapshot contest, with a picture of an owl at a nature preserve. After he graduated from high school, Davidson attended the Rochester Institute of Technology and Yale University.

Following college, Davidson was drafted into the US Army, where he served in the Signal Corps at Fort Huachuca, Arizona, attached to the post's photo pool. Initially, he was given routine photo assignments. Later, stationed in Paris, he met Henri Cartier-Bresson, a later colleague with the Magnum photo agency, sharing his portfolio and receiving advice from Cartier-Bresson.

When he left military service in 1957, Davidson worked as a freelance photographer for LIFE magazine and in 1958 became a full member of Magnum. From 1958 to 1961 he created such seminal bodies of work as “The Dwarf,” Brooklyn Gang,” and “Freedom Rides.” He received a Guggenheim fellowship in 1962 and created a profound documentation of the civil rights movement in America. In 1963, the Museum of Modern Art in New York presented his early work in a solo show.

In 1967, he received the first grant for photography from the National Endowment for the Arts, having spent two years witnessing the dire social conditions on one block in East Harlem. This work was published by Harvard University Press in 1970 under the title East 100th Street and was later republished and expanded by St. Ann’s Press. The work became an exhibition that same year at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. In 1980, he captured the vitality of the New York Metro’s underworld that was later published in a book, Subway, and exhibited at the International Center for Photography in 1982. From 1991-95 he photographed the landscape and layers of life in Central Park. In 2006, he completed a series of photographs titled “The Nature of Paris,” many of which have been shown and acquired by the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Davidson received an Open Society Institute Individual Fellowship in 1998 to return to East 100th Street His awards include the Lucie Award for Outstanding Achievement in Documentary Photography in 2004 and a Gold Medal Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Arts Club in 2007. Classic bodies of work from his 50-year career have been extensively published in monographs and are included in many major public and private fine art collections around the world. He continues to photograph and produce new bodies of work [via wiki and Magnum]




*click on images for a larger view*
Welsh Pony

Brooklyn Gang Series
Brooklyn Gang Series

So I have done what I wanted to do, I have seen everything, misery, celebrity, the beautiful people, the wicked ones, generosity and hatred. But I think I have gone beyond my vision.... In the heart of my own life, in the heart of other people's lives. Perhaps that is the most important thing I have done. Bruce Davidson
Brooklyn Gang Series



 Arresting Demonstrators, Birmingham, Alabama, May 1963
 Birmingham, Alabama. 1963
 Part of Welsh miners series
  Part of Welsh miners series
  Part of Welsh miners series


East 100th Street, NYC


”The Nature of Paris"

Davidson's drive-thru image was used for a Beastie Boys Cover 


Bob Dylan's "Together Through Life" featured Davidson's image.


Most of my pictures are compassionate, gentle and personal. They tend to let the viewer see for himself. They tend not to preach.  ~ Bruce Davidson












 

Sunday Best, Harlem





Bruce Davidson's Brilliant Subways Series ~ circa 1980's

Undercover cop takes down a mugger who tried to take Davidson'e camera.

“To prepare myself for the subway, I started a crash diet, a military fitness exercise program, and early every morning I jogged in the park. I knew I would need to train like an athlete to be physically able to carry my heavy camera equipment around in the subway for hours every day. Also, I thought that if anything was going to happen to me down there I wanted to be in good shape, or at least to believe that I was. Each morning I carefully packed my cameras, lenses, strobe light, filters, and accessories in a small, canvas camera bag. In my green safari jacket with its large pockets, I placed my police and subway passes, a few rolls of film, a subway map, a notebook, and a small, white, gold-trimmed wedding album containing pictures of people I’d already photographed in the subway. In my pants pocket I carried quarters for the people in the subway asking for money, change for the phone, and several tokens. I also carried a key case with additional identification and a few dollars tucked inside, a whistle, and a small Swiss Army knife that gave me a little added confidence. I had a clean handkerchief and a few Band-Aids in case I found myself bleeding.” ~ Davidson












"I wanted to transform the subway from its dark, degrading,

and impersonal reality into images that open up our 

experience again to the color, sensuality, and vitality of the

 individual souls that ride it each day."

~ Bruce Davidson


















Bruce Davidson speaks about working on the Subway Series and the storey behind some of the images.



Bruce Davidson's well used Leica.(with Canadian made lens!)
Davidson's Leica arsenal


“I’ve never been a photographer that loves sunshine,
I love gloom. But now it’s changing for me. I just want the tree to be there and to be lit beautifully, and the light in L.A. is extraordinary. It’s still L.A. It’s still wonderfully absurd.” 
~ Bruce Davidson









Bruce Davidson - Making Contact from Fred Riedel on Vimeo.