furcafe
Veteran
I agree. Though on 1st glance, this easily could be taken to be a "anybody could do that" project, I think a great deal of thought & preparation went into it.
Reminds me that a few years back another bartender/bar owner/photographer, published a book (or had a show?) of images of his clientele. IIRC, the bar was in NY or NJ & the photos were B&W & from the 1960s-80s.
Reminds me that a few years back another bartender/bar owner/photographer, published a book (or had a show?) of images of his clientele. IIRC, the bar was in NY or NJ & the photos were B&W & from the 1960s-80s.
The images are thoughtfully crafted in many ways.
1. They do NOT look like they were shot with a point and shoot with a built in flash. The lighting is very carefully worked out so she gets exactly the look she wants. She used a strobe, obviously, but there is some kind of diffusion of the light source, perhaps a bare bulb flash unit in a white reflector or some other device to add subtle diffusion. Also, the light source is too high up for it to look like a built in flash. It may evoke the look of on camera flash but the images lack many of its telltale signs like glossy skin reflections, red eye, etc. Seems very sophisticated to me.
2. She is thinking a lot about depth of field; the pics are riveting in part because the faces are sharp but the hands, the stuff in the foreground are not. Also because of her careful use of lighting, those objects that are closer are not washed out as they would be with on-camera flash.
3. Her images are full of art historical references. I thought immediately of the portraits by Titian; got out my Titian book and the similarities to some of his portraits is really striking. Try google images if you don't have a Titian book. Also the depth of field/ focus play reminds me somewhat of Vermeer. These characteristics are too consistent to be chalked up to conicidence. I think she knows, and appreciates art history.
4. The glance, the humanity, the loneliness and isolation of the individuals. Perhaps the most important thing.
5. The prices: So what? One image is already sold out. As for buying Cartier-Bresson prints, any photo dealer can tell you that finding a good Cartier-Bresson print is very difficult. They are few and far between. There are, however, many, many poorly printed HCB prints out there - and signed ones too. For $2K you are paying more for an autograph, you'd be extraordinarily lucky to get a good signed HCB print for $2K.
6. (Disclaimer) - The above statements are my opinion, my opinion only.