Prelude to the A-Frame and Day One the Divine Entrance.

 
 

May 28, 2023 11:59pm

Three blue sky days at the Ameliasburgh museum, setting up wet-collodion base camp, behind the stone Honey House, table and darkbox right and left of the honey bee landing strip and hive tunnel, fortunately this hive was no longer in use. Trepidation, a year and half of waiting, preparation, coordination the wetplate angst thick and full, fingers itching to get that first plate off and in the bath, so that angst needs replaced by clear mind and focus? Who knows? The nature of out-of-doors wetplate [as I have written many times before] is a game of dice even on the best of days, the chemistry warms at different rates and as an example the spring pollen can add its own decisions to the surface of the plate, hopefully not to aggressively and as the practioner, my way through to the end result is the subtle adjustments of exposure, manipulations of light and the development, plus and minus calculations that – the fates willing, bring me to the goal of a usable, dare I say, perfect image.

Alright now with the preamble out of the way, the residency photographic project currently called Silvered Tongued, started three days before I landed at the Purdy A-Frame, good thing too, I was able to get as much indecision and bad plates out of the way. But to our continued good fortune the illustrious Jean connected us with resident Ameliasburgh artists to share their home and splendid gracious hospitality, Shelia and Manuel – Vielen dank! Thank you for the nerdy geological discussions on glaciation and soil maps, the black double long espressos and the No Milk foamy cappuccinos. The project and good conversation are indistinguishable, I think to myself. The stories of family types these relationship squares/boxes of our lives and how time wears the sharp pointed corners off the edges, well, off some of the edges.  About historical lineages seven generations deep and how even those come to an end.  Fantastical stories of spectacular game show winnings, which the precise answers, came in the clarity of a dream the night before. Devouring legumes, chickpea flower and early garden shoots, Baco Noir and, ancestors forgive me  - Chardonnay, delicious despite my prejudice. All this wonderful humanity was bookended and peppered between with fondling of limestone Ordovician and Cretaceous jewels, picked and collected with intention and serendipity, hundreds of pebbles, stepped on by most. We could have just stayed, the stories and good company seemed endless.

Back to the Wetplateing, in Ameliasburgh Museum, sometimes affectionately referred to as Janice Land for she is the Curator and interpreter of the Village collections there. Janice opened the doors to the collections for us and gave us free reign, albeit with caution and museum handling credentials.  I had a year ago scouted certain objects that I could potentially find as muse or inspiration to the project and many of those became the directed focus and singular minded intention, the church spire the ‘Wilderness Gothic’ steeple from Al’s poem the obvious one. Others not so obvious, old honey tins stamped with producers names all residing in Wooler Ontario – the town being Al’s birthplace. Many people came by to chat or otherwise linger and have their portrait made sharing a story in exchange, it is really happening I thought - the project has begun. The cloudless blue Ameliasburgh sky made for hard contrast and quick exposures, with occasional corrections and chemical adjustments. The third days cleanup went slow, nakkered [exhausted], but knowing our home for the next month was literally just across the lake - as the heron flies.


Walking up to the A-Frame allows you to step back approximately 30 or 50 years, much of the trees and simplicity remain, although the surrounding palatial estates and meticulous green lawns have replaced the former cottages and  ALL the space between - the Charm and power of the place – this place – their place – the place of so many words and years of dedication, still fill the air.  I am snapped from my sentimentality as carrying of things and general moving in need my full attention, Heather points and gives me some necessary direction. After all the what-nots have mostly been placed, the ceremonial beer, “all beautiful yellow flowers” has been poured and drank, we survey the shoreline still intact and full of willows, cedars and spruce. Sadly the giant ash trees have been devoured by the insatiable ash borer and stand as skeletal shadows. We raise our glasses, Heather and I to the past, the giant setting orb, this present, the Purdy’s, the Glorious A-Frame and this beautiful residency.

The climatic moments ended, the necessity of sleep upon us. Wordless we brush our teeth under red painted boards reclaimed by Al from some other building – I walk down the hall and to the Purdy’s bedroom I peruse night reading from the bookshelf lining the entire forward wall at the end of the bed. A fetishistic collection of vintage pelican blues, interspersed with penguin orange stand out, I move right to the very end and find what I am believing is a book neglected somewhat, relegated to general or ‘collected’ section of the bookshelf, within the table of contents, singular poems circled in red – Al’s favorite Canadian poems? Or just ones that deserved the merit of the red ball point annotations – the exception[Als] I read two before I flounder and nod repeatedly, lights out. More on this later perhaps…

 

 

Michael Snow's Lion

This past September 2017, I had the privilege of traveling to Toronto and take a portrait of the visionary Canadian artist Michael Snow.  When you get an opportunity like this a hundred ideas and many "what if's" go through your head, trying to prepare for all the possible scenarios so that you will be ready for whatever happens. Understandably, you only get one shot at a chance like this, but primarily when you respect someone, you want to capture there likeness in a way that has something representative of their stature....yes of course that is what I wanted - transcendence, photographic wetplate transcendence.

It's OK, you can laugh - I know it is a tall order.

We arrived early morning loaded with all my wetplate gear knocked on Michaels door and after some simple chit chat, he directed us to his backyard, where I was to set-up and do the portrait. Heather, my partner & assistant went to check it out and I went back to the car to get the gear.  As I was filling my arms Heather returns and says, "Ummm, have you seen the backyard?"   Suggesting perhaps, if Michael had sent me a picture, during our email conversations.  I say, "No why?"....Ok, I am getting nervous.

It is your typical Toronto postage stamp backyard, not unusual and kind of what I was expecting - the real problem though - maple tree saplings had grown up to a level and density to block out most of the light, but more importantly the blue light, critical to wetplate, I swallowed hard. There was however a shaft of light passing between the two adjacent buildings that for about twenty minutes might offer some illumination - but I hadn't set up yet!

This was sort of the flavour of how the whole day went - basically chasing the light and a very patient Michael Snow around his house, to somehow just miss the image and light I was looking for in my minds eye.  It is only when looking back over the images many weeks later that allowed me the space and time to see what was captured.  The fourth image below is the only result from that backyard shaft of light glory moment, for by the time I had got set-up and poured the plate, posed & and composed the portrait, my ray of light was gone and Michael was getting cold.  The image I captured at a 45 second exposure is more of an expression of the moment then the tack sharp mirror representation we expect from formal portraiture.

I did manage to get that sharp image though, on his front step along side the fu-dog with demonic eyes. The sun was shinning straight on and into his eyes so it gives him a badass grimace, not at all the kind, accommodating, and patient man I had the pleasure of passing a day with. As for the images, - not quite the image(s) I had in my mind, but as always - far more interesting than anything I had imagined.

Sheesham & Lotus & Son Album Cover Shoot

Well it has been waaaaaay to long since I wrote something here not that I haven't been busy, just busy enough not to get here to post something, i have oodles of things to share but let us start with something new and exciting.  This past March I had the pleasure of having Sheesham & Lotus & Son out to my place for a photo shoot and now that the album is finally out I can talk about it.  I managed to get several exceptional shots in, in-between them running off to record the tracks for the album.  The best one is presented here for your viewing pleasure.  Also check them out when they are in your town!!  They are fantastic performers and authentic to the core.

Having a Lynne Cohen Moment.

​On one of my adventures through the vast entrails of the concrete jungle looking for the mens room, i turned right, walked through generic double glass doors and fell into a Lynne Cohen photograph.  Oddly enough though, the photo i captured with my phone camera was something more sci-fi than Cohen.  You will just have to take my word for it.  Although the weird sense of water as opposed to floor is deliciously off-putting.

​Lynne Cohen's Swimming pool?

​Lynne Cohen's Swimming pool?

​No?  Perhaps it is more effective horizontal?

​No?  Perhaps it is more effective horizontal?

Happy Birthday Abe

Thanks to wetplate collodion this (cropped) image of Abraham Lincoln still sharp and penetrating.  Photographed by Alexander Gardner, and taken on February 21, 1885.  The interesting detail to this image is, in the course of removing the plate from the camera, Alexander Gardner cracked it, so it was in two pieces, but still printable, you can see the crack in the albumen prints made from it still smiling at us after 123 years.  

Happy 204th birthday Abe!

Abe cropped, National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Abe cropped, 

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Abraham Lincoln  -  Alexander Gardner, 1865/Albumen silver print/National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Abraham Lincoln  -  Alexander Gardner, 1865/Albumen silver print/National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution

Don McCullin gives a tour @ National Gallery of Canada

Recently I had the great pleasure of being part of a tour given by the veteran photojournalist Don McCullin of the new National Gallery of Canada retrospective exhibition of his work.  

For more than an hour we walked through the galleries as he spoke intimately of his life, his work and the many dangerous and heart wrenching encounters encompassing the several decades he traveled the world.

The small gallery spaces were packed with people in a breathless silence as Mr. McCullin spoke in a humble, and at times shockingly frank manner of the horrors and injustices he personally witnessed and sometimes captured with his camera. 

I say “sometimes” because, as he explained, often he could not bring himself to capture the brutality and other worldliness of what he was witnessing and in some cases he was told in no uncertain terms, “you take any pictures we will kill you”.  The images he captured on film represent only a small portion of his actual life experiences.  

That could be said of us all, but very occasionally in life we meet people that seem to have lived many more lives within this short lifespan we all experience - their bodies and minds, vessels of a million stories witnessed. Don McCullin is this sort of rare person.  And, as he admitted himself, it is even more rare to have come through it all with your sanity intact, “I am not sure why or how I am not like one of those insane street people in my photographs.”

He often spoke in an off-handed manner about stumbling about in the dark and how anger was a motivating force in his work. His humility seemed to attribute credit for his images to “luck” of some sort.  One look at the evidence, his photographic legacy and you can easily recognize there is much more at work here. 

Don McCullin intuitively understands light, has mastery over composition and visual language - he can in an instant capture fleeting moments so powerful that they sum up human emotion, frailty and injustice.  Perhaps, he was in the right place at the right time, but I am thankful it was his finger on the trigger of the Nikon F.

Do not miss this exhibition, now on at the National Gallery of Canada.

Don McCullin speaking to a full house at the National Gallery of Canada

Don McCullin speaking to a full house at the National Gallery of Canada