Throwback Thursday

Feeling nostalgic…

My House

The above photo is of the house I grew up in, on Niagara Street in the Riverside neighborhood in Buffalo, NY. It was made just before the pandemic for my “Driving Home” project. It looks pretty much as it did in my youth, and although I’ve not lived there on over 40 years, memories of those years come flooding back every time I view it.

Standing on the front porch in my Sunday Easter best; pretending to be a fireman, saving the neighborhood with my best friend Johnny who lived 2 doors down (partially seen on the left); playing touch football in the street (partially seen on the right); looking out over the Niagara River and across to Canada from our attic windows (this is another story unto itself..). All these memories as vivid as if they had occurred yesterday.

Such is the power of photography.

While books and entire college courses have been created to explore that power, as I contemplate this image today, I think about the importance of not just creating the work, but of preserving it. It makes little sense to me to create work without some thought as to how one plans to keep it. Or. put another way: I’ve created this image, “now what?”

For me, the artifact has always been the thing. The print, the negative, if you can’t hold it, it ain’t real. 0’s and 1”s are just abstract concepts. You can’t see them, touch them, or feel them. They are only representations of something. Hence the only way to view a digital file is on a screen. And when the screen goes dark, the image is gone.

This is not an attempt to bash digital photography. I use digital capture devices practically every day. I love them. I bought a brand new iphone 13 not because I needed a better phone but because I wanted a better camera.

No, what I’m saying is, it’s not just enough to make the image capture. That’s only the first step. The most important step is to preserve it. After all, when we’re gone, that’s the only tangible part of our collective memory that will remain…

Throwback Thursday

Through the years, photographers have often defined themselves by the gear they used. Early in my career, I’d often get questions like: “Where are the square pictures?”, “Do you use the ‘hass-lee-blad’?”, “Are you a ‘professional’ photographer?”

Ugh.

Advances in technology have made creating images more accessible and easier than ever. (I didn’t say “better” than ever…) Thus proving the dictum: “The best camera is the one you have with you”.

This group was made while on a trip to Savannah, GA a few years ago. I had a bag full of cameras but these were made with my iphone using the Hipstamatic and Snapseed apps.

Throwback Thursday

As folks are often wont to do this time of year, I am sorting through mountains of old image files to catalogue and save for future reference. Every time I add a new storage device it seems like this becomes a necessity. The older one gets the more wisdom you’d think would be gained. In my case, apparently not.

Perhaps because digital imaging allows us to create so many more images, or maybe because of the unending possibilities and ways to use our pictures I have such a difficult time keeping things organized, I’ll probably never figure out. But here is a selection of pictures recently rediscovered that I really like.

Throwback Thursday

On a spooky Halloween night going deep into the vault and bringing treats back out into the light…

In thinking about Halloween and spooky things, one of the first things that comes to mind (after candy!) are the horror movies we watched as kids, and one of the best of all, The Phantom of the Opera. My favorite parts were the scenes of the Phantom playing the organ. I thought that was really cool.

One of the great joys of the time I was still living and working in Buffalo was the opportunity to photograph Shea’s Performing Arts Center, the crown jewel of the theatre district. For several years, prior to leaving, I photographed events, musicals and the occasional concert. I met and photographed many of the stars that came through with touring Broadway musicals.

I also photographed the restoration of the theatre and the stage expansion. The stage expansion allowed the larger touring shows to move in. The first show after the completion of the expansion was The Phantom of the Opera.

Shea’s Lobby

The image above is of the theatre lobby and grand staircase. My first time attending a musical was while in middle school. As a school trip we attended a matinee performance of 1776. I didn’t even know what a musical was, but my parents insisted I go. I still remember sitting in the middle of the theatre before the show, staring up at the ceiling and being overwhelmed by how opulent it was. I grew up in Riverside. I had never seen anything like this.

I may dig a little deeper into the archives and bring up some of the interior shots at another time, but this one will have to suffice for now.

Also apropos to the Halloween theme, are many people who believe the theatre is haunted. There are those who claim to have seen the ghost of Michael Shea wandering the hallways reminding people how “magnificent” it is.

I cannot prove or disprove the veracity of those claims to having seen him. But I can say with certainty, he is absolutely correct in his opinion of the theatre. It is truly magnificent.

Throwback Thursday

Once again, here we go, searching the archives and bring the past into the present…

An often annoying character trait of many photographers is the obsessive need to discuss gear. Put more than one photographer in a room and before you can say: “Say Cheese!” there will be a conversation on the type of gear they’ve used in the past; what they’re using now; what they’ve sold to buy more gear that now they wish they’d kept; and what they’d like to buy in the future.

Ugh…

I don’t know why we do, but we do. I am occasionally as guilty as anyone else. Perhaps it’s because it’s bond we all share. Perhaps it’s because we have nothing else interesting to say. Who knows?

All i do know is, it just doesn’t matter.

The best camera is the one you have with you, and most often, it’s your phone. As convenient as that is, with all the apps available, it couldn’t be more fun to make pictures. Even when I’m carrying another camera, I will still use my phone if I think I might want to play around with the images later.

Farm House

The picture above was made on one of those occasions. While out working on a project, I passed the abandoned farm house and after making several pictures with my larger cameras, I thought it might also be fun to make a few with my phone.

Generally, my go to phone app is Snapseed, mostly because you can make all your adjustments later, and if you don’t like them, you discard them. But I really love my Hipstamatic app and that’s what I used here.

So while technically, this IS about the gear, it was really mostly about the fun!