Saturday 25 June 2011

Where memories live...

Rotundas can break me out in nostalgia. Sometimes it feeds on my own memories of special times. Or it reprints in my mind a display of a beautiful light, anchoring my thoughts to a particular place.

These drifting moments, though, are not just limited to places I know or those memories I can still defog and enjoy. More often, a rotunda will take my thoughts to times long passed, well before my own carbon footprints began their journey.

I often time travel in these old, round structures when I find one for the first time - creating a mingle of music, gatherings, play and fun through a somewhat rose coloured imagination. Ideas of a time based on unknown, ghostly faces staring from the sepia toned prints I've seen in historic books. Or the 'yesteryear' features in community newspapers looking to fill pages at a cheaper rate than covering issues more recent.

Of course, I am talking about those 'good old days' when life was supposedly simpler, friendlier and less rushed. History tells me that those days also experienced events that no one would dare describe as good. I'm sure, though, that the rotundas I've enjoyed are made of many more good days than bad.

This morning I wandered down to Balmoral Beach in Sydney. The sun was just rising and the usual suspects of joggers, walkers and swimmers were intersecting their lives with nods of recognition and the occasional praise for such a beautiful winter's day. Others, more focussed on the less significant, didn't bother.

Amongst all this there was a short moment when the space near the Rotunda went quiet. Not a single silhouette of a jogger, a talking troupe of walking women or the sniffing shapes of dogs stretching their leashes looking for somewhere to pee or crap. Just some trees and a rotunda that had seen it all many times before.

Through that moment a couple walked down the path, past the statue of Billy the street sweepers dog and towards the beach. Their hands held each other with experience, tenderness and trust. Though out of my earshot I could see they were chatting and relaxed. The rotunda had company and, for now, time was still.

I'm glad I was there and very happy I remembered to press the shutter button.

Technical Information:
HDR Composite of 4 frames based on f11 at 1/50th of a second. 160 ISO. Canon 1Ds Mark 3. 17mm Tilt/Shift Lens. Friday June 24th, 7.26 am. Processed in Lightroom and Photoshop.




Friday 17 June 2011

Meet Max

A little while ago I was testing a new light in my apartment block's car park when Max wandered by with his Dad and sister.

Without prompting he stood in the perfect position in front of the light and looked straight into the camera - it was a moment too good to ignore.

Although he stood in the same position while his Dad and I chatted, he allowed me one picture only. I was not about to argue for more :-)


Tech Details:
Canon 1Ds Mark3, 24-70mm f2.8L lens
Elinchrom Quadra Flash with Elinchrom Beauty Dish
1/125th sec at f5.6. ISO 100.

Thursday 9 June 2011

Brisbane Photoshoot for Navitas

I have been photographing campuses and students for Navitas for the last few years. Aside from making pictures right across Australia I have also shot in Singapore, the UK and Canada.

The photography is challenging: there are tight schedules and complicated logistics not to mention a mishmash of lighting conditions. The biggest challenge, though, is communicating my ideas and instructions to a plethora of languages and cultures. It is also what creates the best reward.

Many of the students are in the early stages of learning English so my 'Australianized' version of it may not help matters. Somehow, though, a concoction of my gestures and the interplay of many languages results in pictures of real life multicultural scenarios. It's inspiring to see so many young people, so far from their families and cultures, interact so easily and enthusiastically with each other. 


Early this month (June, 2011) I was engaged by Louise Bowden (Group Brand Manager for Navitas) to photograph students at the Brisbane campus. The shoot was scheduled over 3 days and included outdoor and class room / facility locations as well as in a 'studio' we created in one of the classrooms.

The movie is a sampling of the images we made during those three days. On this occasion countries of origin included Venezuela, Poland, India, France, Vietnam, China and Australia.

Of course, a shoot like this needs organisation, design, hair and makeup as well as enthusiastic students. 
Special thanks go to:

The Navitas Creative Team:
Louise Bowden
Jodie Lindsay
Jill Smyth

Hair & Makeup:
Kate Kennedy

The Students:
Lucas, Matthew, Vanilla, Sen, Vinay, Ewa, David, Lucia and Long

About Navitas
Navitas is an Australian company established in 1994 and today it employs more than 4,000 people. Each year Navitas enrols over 55,000 students from 87 different countries. They have more than 100 campuses in 28 countries offering a wide choice of multicultural study destinations – from the beaches and rainforests of Australia, to the mountains and lakes of Vancouver, to the cultural heritage of the UK.

Music:
This ain't LAX by Crystal Cove

For the gearheads:
Canon Cameras (1Ds 3, 5D Mark2)
Canon Lenses (24-70mm f2.8L, 70-200mm f2.8L, 100mm f2.8 Macro
Elinchrom Quadra Flash
Canon 580 EX11 Flash
Pocket Wizard & Elinchrom Remotes
Lightroom 3 Software
15" MacBookPro