Archive for February, 2010

Blue Boys

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Yesterday I thumbed through pages of vintage photos from China, taken by the Australian traveler/writer/photographer G.E. Morrison, hoping to find photos of people making paper. There were no papermakers among his travel photos and the pictures of his servants, whose names were simply written “Boy 1″ and “Boy 2″ – though he was fluent in Chinese – but I did discover these blue kids on the streets of Beijing:

Old Chinese Cyanotype

with a simple inscription on the back:

Old Chinese Cyanotype

This print was a test on thin, uncoated paper. It was made with a glass negative, and the image had an amazing clarity impossible to duplicate with digital prints. I held it between my fingers and wondered how many other photos of these street kids went into the bin. The photographer would have selected the best print to reproduce in much more expensive black-and-white.

For that photographer this print was just testing skin tones of local street urchins, but for me, a century later on another continent, it was an inspiration.

Happy New Year! Happy Hangovers!

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Valentine Hangover

Cyanotype Photogram of antacids on velvet from the Workaholics series

Here are some Alka-Seltzers and aspirin to take away any lingering effects from this weekend. For many it was  jam-packed with celebrations for Lunar New Year and Valentines day.

Today is yet another big holiday celebrated around the world: Mardi Gras. For Catholics, Mardi Gras is the last chance to live it up before the privations of Lent.  Spare a thought today – or another donation – for the survivors in Haiti who have had to cancel their biggest party of the year, the Mardi Gras festival Kanaval.

Why My Favorite Earrings Can’t Come with me to Bangkok

Friday, February 12th, 2010

Ear Knife

Scimitar earrings from Hanoi, handmade by a 5th-generation family of silversmiths

How to Lose Followers on Twitter

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Freedom
“Freedom” from the Workaholics series, Cyanotype Photogram on bamboo velvet, 2007

Post something political. Or intimate. Or threatening.

Birth control is all of these, to some people.

See that white rectangle with a bunch of dark circles inside? Yeah, the one that looks like an Alka-Seltzer tablet floating up in a glass with bubbles trailing off. Most modern women have had a stash of these in their medicine cabinets.  Once or twice.

I posted a link to this photogram on Twitter and pissed off some “followers”. They probably wouldn’t have cared for this Patpong Weekend either.

New Beginnings

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Cures [Negative]

Original Photo: New Orleans 2002, Printed 2003. Cyanotype on cold press paper
Light filters through an apothecary’s window display of abandoned medical panaceas

There are few sensations as exhilarating as a clean slate. Beginnings are fumbles in the dark, full of possibilities and pitfalls. Whether we’re a middle-aged man falling for an ingenue, a traveler landing in a brand new city, or a woman besotted with babies, we’re all attracted to the same thing: a fresh start.

Artists fall for new materials in the same way.

While sorting through boxes from the past, I rediscovered my first cyanotypes from 2003, made shortly before I moved to Asia. As I sifted through these prints on French, English and Indian cotton papers, memories come flooding back:

* Late nights printing with halogen and other lights, experimenting with angles and distance, melting negatives, reversing others, and overexposing most of the prints that made it that far.

* Entire afternoons spent at Kinko’s making transparent negatives: enlarging, inverting and adjusting contrast on their copy machines.

* Days devoted to printing in Boston’s feeble spring sunlight.

The images are from my travels through the UK, Cuba, Haiti, Morocco and more. Most of my experiments I destroyed, and some sold to casual collectors.

Click here to see the few early cyanotypes that made the final cut.

Walk Away Your Troubles

Friday, February 5th, 2010

Ninh Binh, Vietnam 2008

A brand new bridge at the Trang An caves, Vietnam

August 2008, Ninh Binh:

It’s my first time in Vietnam and I’m on a mission to talk to as many artists and galleries as I can for the website Gallery Cyclo [still a work in progress]. But I’m tired. I’ve been hassled in Saigon, hustled in Hoi An, and had a moto driver try to mug me on a beautiful night in the ex-DMZ city of Danang. My knees and palms are still covered in scabs from jumping off his motorbike to keep my camera – and everything else – out of his hands.

Looking for a respite from the big cities, I take a few days off from artists and focus on a new photo series. I climb limestone karsts and pant my way into pagodas at the top. Visit a Chinese-style Catholic cathedral made famous by one of my favorite writers. A hotel receptionist hands me a map and says, “You should see these caves at Trang An, they’re not in the Lonely Planet.” Always a recommendation to follow.

My guide and I hop into a rickety wooden boat and are soon dodging stalactites in a massive inland lagoon. The caves are truly spectacular, and are unlike anywhere else I’ve been before or since.

More photos and descriptions over at ThingsAsian.

Sapphire Geisha

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010


Image Used With Permission From Beauty And The Bath Geisha Hair Gallery

This geisha’s photo could have been printed on postcards or sold to a private client. She was taken by a professional studio photographer. Cyanotypes were an affordable way for photographers to test the density of their negatives, and were rarely preserved. But  this beautiful picture was kept and chemically toned to a more neutral sapphire blue.

The final image would have been a more traditional black-and-white or sepia-toned print, probably hand-tinted with color.

Thanks to Beauty and the Bath for the use of this image.

Brutal and Beautiful

Monday, February 1st, 2010

I’ve just backed up my laptop and rediscovered forgotten images.

Some Thai boxing photos from a week in Hua Hin, 2005:


Low light photos with no flash turn a brutal scene into a beautiful one.

Colors and highlights are painted onto a dark background.

The effect is rich like pastel on sandpaper.

Movements sketched onto the lens by slow exposures.

I looked at the fight through my lens, one round at a time.

The camera didn’t leave my eyes till the boxers had finished fighting.

There were boys who’d taken steroids then stopped, and men at their prime who still took them.

Any accomplishment demands intense physical and mental power.

Psych out your opponent and you’re halfway to victory.

Each win means there are more who wait to fight you.

And one day you’ll stop winning. What then?

About Me

I'm an american artist with an Asian focus.
I paint sharp-witted women.
I print blue photos of disappearing places. Sometimes I work in Sydney, sometimes I work in Asia. You can keep up and connect with me on Twitter, and Facebook, and Flickr

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