AboutParticipants

10 Friends

A lifelong photo project
10 friends, photographed at home, once every 10 years.
  • December 5, 2010 12:00 pm

    There’s a couple of videos on YouTube of daily photos of people spanning years, but this one — from birth to ten years — was new to me and seemed particularly relevant to this project.

    Progress has been quiet lately since in October I started my final year in university, but I’ve booked my flights to Cambridge for Catriona’s photo after Christmas.

  • September 5, 2010 1:21 pm

    Inspiration: North by Northwest

    Last night I watched Hitchcock’s 1959 thriller North by Northwest with Cary Grant. It’s a thoroughly enjoyable movie that feels much fresher and modern than I expected anything from 1959 to feel. The only thing that distracted me from the engrossing story line, though, was the wonderful photography and lighting in the film. I thought I’d discuss a couple of scenes here, because I found them quite inspiring. They feature a lot of hard light, which is what I primary use myself, and the colour palettes in many shots are so beautifully chosen that the stills are as good as photographs in their own right.

    ↑ First of all, I like the cleanness and neatness of the composition of this scene in a train compartment. The warm hair-light complements the colour of the seat and the skin tones, and in the next scene we’ll see the sunset out the window so the warm light makes sense. Notice how there’s just a little more light on Eva Marie Saint’s character’s face than on her legs, which subtly draws your attention up to her face.

    ↑ Just look how beautifully the ambient twilight has been balanced with the lights at the front of the hotel here. This is the kind of fine balance that lasts for about three minutes before it gets too dark. You can see a little kiss of rim light on Grant’s right side too, just subtly picking him out of the scene.

    ↑ I chose this scene because of the lovely palette of muted light greys in the room. Grant’s suit is darker than the rest of the room and so stands out, but not as much as Maire Saint’s dress which is allowed to steal the show (with a little cameo from the bottle of red Campari for good measure). Short of building a set from scratch for every shot, like Wired, it’s tricky to achieve this, but it’s certainly worth paying this much attention to the objects in the room.

    ↑ This very high contrast scene is all about the details. Notice the diagonal line of medium tones on the curtains to the left of the lamp, and on the check pattern material to the left of those. Both areas of illumination could believably be coming from the lamp (though they definitely aren’t — if they were, the lamp itself would be completely blown out). Notice the highlight on the railing in the foreground, showing us that we are outside, looking in. Again, this light could conceivably be coming from the room itself. Finally notice how again Maire Saint’s clothes stand out in the strongest colour in the scene, while the more muted warm tones in the room around her support the overall palette.

    ↑ I think this is pretty close to perfection. I count a possible total of five lights: (1) the main light on Grant’s eyes; (2) the frontal fill, just as dark as it can be while retaining detail; (3) a blue-gelled rim light on the lower left, giving us the impression of nighttime; (4) an ungelled rim light above the blue one and possibly (5) another one above Grant’s head, pointing downwards. There’s a geometric form created by Grant’s shadow on the wall too which provides pleasing contrast. The pole in the top right is a bit distracting though.

    ↑ Another good example of a single light doing double duty; providing the suitably suspenseful rim light on Grant while also creating the silhouette behind him. Again this light could believably be coming from the lamp on the right. Note also the subtle gradient on the back wall on the right, leading your attention (and Grant’s) downwards. There’s also a subtle light on the floor of the walkway in front of Grant, just giving you a little more of an idea of where he is in relation to the room he’s watching.

    ↑ Here again it’s easy to imagine a single ceiling light in this train compartment lighting this whole scene, from the well-centered rim lights on the two characters to the pleasing gradient on the back wall.

    ↑ Another beautiful colour palette. Everything in the scene is some variation on cool greys. Notice how even the people in the train are dressed in blueish tones.

    ↑ This appears to be a relatively simple scene and set up but if you look more closely you can see how finely balanced the lighting is. Again, it looks like all the light is coming from the ceiling light but of course that’s not the case. Notice the gradients on the desk and walls at the back, all guiding our attention into the centre of the frame. Each character’s face is lit by the main lights, but notice how perfect the fill on the policeman’s body in the foreground is. Easy to make out details, just dark enough that you aren’t distracted by them. Perfect.

  • August 21, 2010 6:38 pm
    Today’s aquisition. View high resolution

    Today’s aquisition.

  • June 3, 2010 12:41 am

    Inspiration: Annie Leibovitz at Fotografiska

    A new museum of photography, Fotografiska, opened just the week before last in Stockholm. I got to pay a visit since I was already in Stockholm to, among other things, photograph Christel for this project and eat dinner at Mattias Dahlgren’s restaurant Matsalen — the 25th best restaurant in the world.

    The top-floor café has these stunning views across the city, appropriately framed by these windows, as if into photographs. Photograph by MauronB on Flickr.

    The old customs house on the docks with glorious views of Skeppsbron, Strandvägen and Djurgården has been transformed into this multi-story exhibition space, and everything in it is on a grand scale — not least the enormous acrylic-mounted prints. The museum has opened with four exhibitions: Swede Lennart Nillson’s A child is born, Vee Speers’s The birthday party, Joel-Peter Witkin’s Bodies and the one that turned out to be most relevant to this project, Annie Leibovitz’s A photographer’s life, 1990-2005.

    “Brother Phillip and my Father, 1988”. Photograph by Annie Leibovitz.

    George W. Bush and his inner circle, photographed in the Cabinet Room of the White House in December 2001. From left: Secretary of State Colin Powell, Vice President Dick Cheney, the president, National-Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, White House chief of staff Andrew Card, C.I.A. director George Tenet (seated), and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. Photograph by Annie Leibovitz.

    Leaving aside the fact that Leibovitz has clearly been alive for longer than 15 years, I approached her exhibition calculating that her ambitious and highly styled photographs of super stars aren’t terribly relevant to the way that I work, particularly for this project. Those ambitious and highly styled photographs certainly are there in this exhibition — like this brilliant, ludicrous photo of Donald Trump in a Mercedes SL with his pregnant wife Melania posing against a private jet in a gold bikini. But in the end I found myself surprised and inspired by her simpler portraits. These featured both ordinary and famous people but had in common simple lighting and posing. But all of them — like the small selection I’ve included here — bristled with life. This is portraiture at its best.

    Jamie Foxx from A photographer’s life, 1990-2005. Photograph by Annie Leibovitz.