December 28, 1999

A final Session for 1999 (Halifax, Nova Scotia)

35mm transparency film
My last session of 1999 was by far the most successful of the natural light sessions I did with Joe and Billie. Unlike the first session in the front room two days earlier, the sun was shining, and the light was perfect. This permitted me to use the slower speed Astia film, which is by far my favorite for skin-tones. It can not be overstated, the importance in selecting the right film for the right subject; and while this is true in black and white, it is doubly true for colour slide film.
35mm transparency film
It never ceases to amaze me the difference between the same room on an overcast afternoon, and a sunny one. Where before I was fighting to keep enough light on the models to work by, on this afternoon, there was more than enough light - occasionally I put my shutter-speed up to 1/250th of a second just to keep my focus as narrow as I like. The work went fast, and the models were running out of ideas for poses before I was out of film.

Where the first session in the front room with Joe and Billie left me with a couple of good images, and the feeling that I was on the right track, the second session, the second session gave me everything I was hoping for and more. The luminosity and glow which contributed so much to the Thalamus work was present throughout the session, and even some film tests I did with a Fuji 6x9 rangefinder turned out successfully.
6x9 cm transparency film
The flurry of photography initiated by Joe and Billie's arrival on Christmas day brought a wonderful close to my year. 47 rolls of 35mm and 120 film, and 12 sheets of 4x5 film were the results of more than thirteen hours of working over three days. The body of work we produced together has a consistency that is encouraging, while also opening areas of work with had previously only been ideas. The overwhelming success of the colour images over the black and white has left me somewhat baffled, but regardless, the final body of work is a great addition to my work as a whole.

A Second Couple's Shower Session (Halifax, Nova Scotia)

35mm transparency film
The second shower session for Billie and Joe seemed to more promising than the first. The day was bright and sunny, which lead to there being four times as much light in the shower, which I thought would lead to better exposed images. In reality, all it did was increase the contrast; as the room was lit by a skylight, the model's heads and shoulders were better lit, along with anything else that was light from directly above. In contrast, everything else became empty shadows.
35mm transparency film
The only real success from the session, to the right, made it worthwhile, however, being the strongest of any of the shower nudes done with Billie and Joe. The crisp, sharp transparency captures every water drop with wonderful detail, almost in spite of the obvious film grain.
35mm transparency film
I suspect that I'll have to learn to work around the inherent contrast in the shower if I continue to explore this space. The encouragement of the few images that did work far exceeds the frustration for the failures.

December 26, 1999

A Couple and a Mirror (Halifax, Nova Scotia)

6x6 cm transparency film
The second studio session with Joe and Billie was planned to focus on working with the the mirror, working in colour and infra-red. Usually, working with colour outdoors is a challenge for me, as it often seem superfluous to the image as a whole. This changes somewhat in the studio, where it is usually the figure alone I am photographing, but colour is still a media I struggle with. Approaching the mirror with colour was little different from my other studio work, in that I tried to focus on the subject alone, and not to get hung up in the fact there was colour film in the camera.
6x6 cm transparency film
On the whole, I think the colour images surpassed the black and white ones of the day before. The photos had a much stronger surreal quality when they were in monochrome, and the addition of the colour skin-tones pulls the images back from the abstract into the concrete. This is not at the expense of the bizarre qualities that were born in the process of working on the mirror, but it does help keep the photos readable.
35mm infrared film
The biggest surprise of the evening session was the 35mm infrared; I had high hopes for it, given the successes I'd encountered with Kim using 120 infra-red, but very few of the images worked. I think this is partially because of their lack of impact next to the colour, and also, I framed the 35mm work much tighter with the medium format camera, which lead to a more fractured, chaotic look to the images.

I am not sure how far I can take the mirror work; I certainly will continue to explore the possibilities, but I am not sure when it stops becoming effective, and simply gets repetitive (pardon the play on words).

After the Shower (Halifax, Nova Scotia)

35mm transparency film
After finishing with the images in the shower, Joe, Billie and I moved into the front room, where I'd produced a series of inspiring images last spring. Ever since my first session with Cheryl, where I'd discovered the wonderful effects of working with the light in this room, I'd wanted to explore the possibilities of a couple as the subject, but did not have the opportunity until now.

Similar to the sessions with Cheryl, this work drawn on the contrasts between the skin and the room around it. Working with high-speed slide film, I managed to make all the images by hand-holding the camera, thereby keeping the spontaneity and freedom of the session intact. I tried from time to time to make large format negatives of some of the poses, but the time and patience required for such images destroyed the pace of the images, and seldom lead to anything usable.
35mm transparency film
The results of my first attempt at combining couples images with the luminous, natural light approach was encouraging. My favorite image, above, has a perfect contrast between the cool sheets and the warm skin, and an excellent pose depicting everything I wished to convey. The quality of the afternoon's light contributes to the photo, and the pose is something that would have been impossible in the original idea (on account of there being too many limbs in the image for a solo model).
35mm transparency film
The only real frustration with the session was the low light level, and the lack of "glow" to the images. By far the best light to work with in the front room is direct sunlight, in the late afternoon, but the weather precluded this. The only images which came close to mimicking the luminosity of a sunny day were a series of sitting portraits we did at the end, set against the white sheet I use to diffuse the outdoor light.

A Couple's Shower Session (Halifax, Nova Scotia)

35mm transparency film
In the winter of 1998, I had made some images in my shower with Megan, with mixed success. The results were strong enough to convince me it was something to explore in the future, but some modifications had to be made to get the results I was after.

After the unexpected Christmas evening session, Joe and Billie were keen to do more modelling, so we'd arranged to spend Boxing Day afternoon working, beginning with shower nudes. The day was overcast, with less light than I had hoped for, but the film I was using, Fuji 1600, is specially designed for pushing, so I rated it at EI 3200, and went to work. Because of the low light, I used a fast 85mm f/1.8 lens, and the entire session was produced with the lens wide-upon, with shutter-speeds between 1/30th and 1/125th of a second.
35mm transparency film
The qualities of the pushed slide film contribute much to the feel of the session, producing stark images with dark, empty shadows and yet at the same time, well detailed highlights. Though it doesn't show on the net, the final images are very grainy, yet surprisingly sharp; the parts of the images that are in focus are detailed and crisp - the water droplets jump out of the images when projected.
35mm transparency film
The results of the session were very encouraging; a number of the images manage to convey what to me is a very powerful story, without words - they are images that cry out for an explanation, and when left alone, seem to create their own pasts. Overall, the images are both far more than I'd hoped for, and very different from what I'd initially envisioned for the work. Where the work with Megan was dreamy and light, these images, because of the lighting, seem more evocative of memory and drama. The high grain of the images is very pleasing, and interesting counterpoint to my usually grainless images, and the muted colour, a result of the push processing of the film, provides a very strong consistency between the images.

December 25, 1999

A Christmas Day Couple's Session (Halifax, Nova Scotia)

6x6 cm film
The sessions that closed 1999 for me were six months in the planning, but were not really finalized until I received a phone call late in the afternoon on Christmas day (from Joe, who'd last worked with me in August), asking if I was free to work that evening. The answer was obvious for me, so after an early movie, I met Joe and his partner, Billie, at the studio for a session that would stretch into the early hours of Boxing Day.
6x6 cm film
Though I'd never met Billie before, she was familiar with my work from the internet, and was willing, with only a little initial nervousness, to try some images working with Joe. We began with some simple standing poses, and the evening grew from there.
6x6 cm film
Probably the biggest influence on my work from the last month or so was my increased use of medium format cameras, initially a borrowed Bronica system, and with Billie and Joe, a Hasselblad. Using the medium format camera radically changes how I work in the studio, permitting me to make images faster, and more spontaneously than with a view camera, and giving me far more freedom in framing and composition.

December 17, 1999

Friends Model Together (Halifax, Nova Scotia)

The evening before this session, I received a call from Anne, who knew of my work from a mutual friend. "Could you make some nude portraits of me tomorrow evening? I want some photos before the holidays!" she asked. In the middle of the December retail season, I was worked to the bone, but given how rare models have been of late,  I said sure, and we arranged to work in the studio the next evening after work.
6x6 cm film
Anne showed up with a friend, Kate, who was also interested in modeling, and we spent some time in a coffee shop before the session, looking over some of my work and discussing the process. Both were even more eager to model after seeing the work in person, so we adjourned to the studio, and began to make images. 
6x6 cm film
Often, the hardest part for a new model is the first moment of revelation; the act of taking clothes off is far harder than saying you will,  and it took a bit for Anne to get up the nerve. In the end, Kate joined her, the two of them realizing it is far easier to model together than alone. For the remainder of the session, I worked with the interplay between Anne and Kate; not partners, as most of my couples images are, but just two friends, modeling together. As opposed to an interplay of bodies, I worked more on juxtaposition, setting one against the other, and letting what evolved from that positioning happen naturally.
6x6 cm film
The results were very pleasing; in addition to a couple of strong images of each model, we managed to produce a very strong set of images of the two women, which focused more of womanhood than any sexuality. My favourite image, to the right, combines a wonderful serenity, in the face of Kate, with a shadowed torso of Anne. The tension between the two is wonderful, creating a difficult image to describe, but one which is instantly effective upon viewing.

December 07, 1999

A New Direction Begins (Halifax, Nova Scotia)

My second session with Kim was a mirror image of the first (this statement is, as you will see, proof that I go in for really bad puns). It began with the two of us trying to build on the previous session; I'd been surprised and pleased by the strength of some of the 35mm infra-red images, and had hopes of capturing similar images on medium format.
35mm transparency
As I have learned in the past, the worst thing for me is to intentionally try to recreate images that have succeeded in the past. The first hour or so was pretty unsuccessful, filled with failed attempts at recreating instants. Eventually, we just gave up.  Rather than try to recreate images, I decided to take the angel photo I'd created with Cheryl and move the possibilities forward.  We worked on a series of poses, with the strongest being a slightly different take on the fallen angel idea.  Rather than having it follow the traditional approach of an angel with their wings ripped , we focused on an angel fallen over her wings, having made a bed of them (presumably to lie in). In a couple of months, I suspect this image will crop up in my digital work, as part of my angel series.
6x6 cm film
The close of the session was by far the most productive.  Kim had asked if I'd ever worked with a model and a mirror, and I'd answered that apart from the self-portrait with Victoria, no. We brought it off the wall, placed it on the floor, and Kim moved to lie upon it. Instantly, everything came alive, and possibilities appeared almost as fast as I could record them on film. Half an hour later, I'd exposed four rolls of 120 and one roll of 35mm film, and was certain I'd achieved the results I'd sought after.
6x6 cm film
The images on the mirror were every bit as successful as I had expected, but could have been improved in several ways. The biggest problem originated in the mirror itself; being a traditional mirror, it had the silvering on the back, and the photos show a slight reflection off the surface of the mirror. Also, the silvering was damaged in several places, which served to mar the reflected image. As I was worked, I realized this might present a problem, but decided to not worry about. In the end, I feel that I would be better with either a clear, front-surfaced mirror, or a more battered mirror, with more flaws and scratches. 

December 05, 1999

A Test Evolves (Halifax, Nova Scotia)

6x6 cm transparency
This studio session was intended to be simply a test of film exposure-speeds, but it ended up yielding a couple of good images all the same. One of the most surprising was a portrait off one of the film test rolls; a pensive moment as I was cranking through film. Once I had finished the couple of rolls of film tests, Cheryl  had had some ideas for poses, drawn from our previous session in November
6x6 cm film
Quite early into the work, we happened upon a pose which was surprisingly strong. I quickly switched the background to white, changed the lens to a wide angle, and made the image above. 

The final results are an excellent example of the power of photography to control a viewer's response. With the wide angle lens and the high-key approach, the image becomes all about the models pose, and the interweaving of limbs. The original image, drawn from the model's own ideas, was all about the heavy negative space above the figure, but by moving the pose onto white, and centering the pose in a square (the full negatives on a 120 camera, like the borrowed Hasselblad I was using), it changes it radically. 
6x6 cm film