Richard G
Veteran
Best wishes kutitta. Some very insightful advice here. Sometimes listening is the best thing to give a child; and playing one of his games.
a couple of thoughts
1. Don't assume the worst, you can survive this and barring that, you can live a long time
2. 5 years old is pretty young to teach him all you know. If you really think you don't have much time, make a library of videos for him, explain what you do, why you do it, the process, the equipment, maybe show some examples.
3. Edit you best work and explain why you like it, how you took the picture, what you were thinking
4. Allow for the fact that he may not be into the same things you are. Explain about the joy and satisfaction of doing something you like, and getting better at it, and the personal reward and sense of accomplishment you feel - then make it universal, whatever his interests eventually are.
5. Best of luck at this difficult time - take a deep breath and think, get the best advice you can and stay positive as much as possible.
Very unfortunate and I pray for your recovery. As told here before, start taking a day at a time and live life happily w/o thinking about this! Don't give up the best parts of life too easily to the negative things surrounding us. This attitude has kept going many unfortunate - I had a friend in UK who had the same, but he moved to live to another place in France, completely changed his lifestyle to spend his last days doing what he likes, completely forgot the bad side and didn't even prepare to wait the end - and some time later the blood tests showed nothing wrong to his own surprise.
I'm in Europe though if you're interested I may "chip in" my part if you'd like to have some of your best film frames drumscanned. Note the drum scanning isn't some cheap and mass scanning - one scan takes me average 30 minutes with wet-mounting, scanning and demounting - fair amount of handwork. So you could consider sending me selected best frames you think have a high potential "landing" into your book or exhibition, in case you're interested in having some of your film work included.
Margus
Hi Kutay,
What city are you based in? I'm neither an Aussie or live in Australia, but I have shown there a couple of times and might be able to dig around and provide some suggestions to start with. As Calebarchie mentioned, exhibition programs are usually planned 6-12 months in advance and it's generally a time consuming and tiring process of proposal application, especially without a history of shows. Should you want to go down this route then you can also send your proposals to me to look over. I'm a "professional" artist, I normally have about 5-10 exhibitions a year in 3 or 4 different countries and I've written more proposals than I care to remember, so I may be able to offer some perspective.
Having said that though, my recommendation would be that if you must have an exhibition you do it independently by renting a space, have a nice opening and having it open to the public for a couple of days. If I may be direct, you have some great shots, but on the whole it also strikes me as very personal body of work that might not hold as much meaning for a wider audience outside as it does for you, your family, and friends. I would advise that should you put together a successful application to a gallery you might find that in the end it could come at the sacrifice of the personal significance of your photographs.
Wether or not your work goes into a gallery has no bearing on the quality or importance of what you've made and does not validate it one way or the other. The real achievement is in the fact the photos were taken in the first place, exhibitions are just context. Like the others said, making a book is a great idea and in some ways can be a much better way of seeing photographs, and has the added benefit of making for a great gift.
Do let me know if I can help in any way, and best of luck fighting this.
I was diagnosed with Multiple Myeloma in May 2001 (stage III - and there is no stage IV). At the time, my "expiry" date was considerably less than the TriX in my fridge.
Thanks to advances in treatments and the care from BC Cancer Agency and the expertise among the medical professionals here in Vancouver - I am still around. The treatments are not pleasant - stem cell transplant, massive chemo, long term use of Thalidomide and variations of that, but it has kept me alive - also a lot of credit has to go to Tuulikki, my wife, who is pushing me forward when you really only want to lie down and pull the covers over your head.
Attitude is probably the most important asset. You are in for a rough ride -but it is doable and the fact that you have your son is an incentive to stay with it. My sympathies are with you - and don't give up. There will be times when you wonder if the treatments are worth it - they are!
As for a legacy - look at at book and continue shooting, documenting the process. I spent 3 weeks in a sterile "bubble" for the stem cell transplant - brought along two cameras (M2/Bess R4M) and a couple of lenses (21/35), lots of TriX - and yes, most of the shots are of my feet, on the blanket, under the blanket - a couple of "selfless" with a multitude of plastic tubing attached to me.
Once you are through with the travails of treatment and your son is old enough to understand - a book will be more of a legacy than anything else. You can even use something like Blurb to do it - and have the people involved sign your copy.
Good luck and keep the spirit up.
Tom