Category Archives: Influences

A Night At the Magnum Book Signing Event

I was a bit worn out from the night before when Conover sent me an email asking if I was going to go to the Magnum book signing in Chelsea.  I said “No, I can’t handle the city two nights in a row.”

‘Oh, come on!,” he replied. “What else do you have going on?”

Fair point.  After all, I was in New York and if you’re involved in photography, these are probably the type of events you don’t want to miss.  Plus, I’d at least had some conversations with Soth and David Alan Harvery, so it wouldn’t be completely strange to say hello.

I walked in a few minutes after the doors opened, and it was already rather crowded.  I spotted a few of the Magnum guys as I made my way to the beer.  As I sipped my Brooklyn, I spotted Conover waving at me.  He was talking with Andrew Hetherington, Martin Fuchs and another guy I didn’t recognize at first, who later turned out to be John Loomis.

We chatted about the usual things, social media, photographers, blogging, you know, the type of topics that usual bring out the sarcasm in photographers.  It was good to chat with John Loomis who I’ve followed for awhile now. Sharp guy who knows the game inside and out.

As I went up for my second beer, I noticed that Soth was near the beer table.  After I got my beer I pulled the move where you hang around the periphery of a conversation and wait for the moment when it ends.  I’m not the type of guy whose comfortable approaching famous, semi-famous, micro-famous, photo-famous or any sort famous people, so I normally need a really good reason. Soth was from Minnesota. Soth was the first photographer my good friend Heath exposed me to. His work was the first that really made me interested in photography.

Plus, we’d had a couple Twitter exchanges, so I was fairly confident he’d at least recognize my name or if not, LPV.

I introduced myself and went with my joke, “So, what’s my commission for selling all those Parke books in HCSP?

We laughed. “I’ll buy you a beer,” he said, pointing to the bar. They were free.

We chatted a bit about Minnesota but I could tell he was weary about talking to people. I kind of suspected this from following his blog over the years. This isn’t the part of photography he enjoys the most, not by a long shot. Knowing this, I kept it brief and went back to where Conover was holding court.

Trent Parke

In HCSP Trent Parke is a legend. Hell, he’s a legend everywhere. When I started shooting black and white, his work was on my mind frequently.  Once you’ve looked at it, it’s hard to forget.  There aren’t many photographers whose work sears into your mind and can be vividly recalled when you close your eyes.  His work is like that. There’s a certain magic to it that’s so quintessentially black and white.

He and Soth drifted close to us and again. I felt compelled to use my joke, but since Soth was there, I decided to change it up.

I tapped Parke on the shoulder and introduced myself, and mentioned the conversation I’d had with Soth.

“Yeah, you have a cult following on Flickr. There are people that try for months to mimic certain shots.”

We laughed, sipped the beers, and then Soth roamed away.

Like my conversation with Soth, I was expecting to keep it short with Parke. But then something happened.  We started shooting the shit about street photography, and then the philosophy of photography.

When you get into those good conversations where both people are engaged, you sort of lose track of time, and it becomes difficult to remember exact details.  We talked about his new book, and how he was mixing in writing for the first time.  He actually has three books in the works right now, one of his color work, this new black and white project, and a new version of his older BW street work.

He told me that he’s not the type of photographer to go out searching for new, exotic locations. He’s interested in working around Sydney and really getting to know one location.  I told him a bit about my Greenpoint project and how I thought it was important to walk the same beat because it forces you to look the same scenes over and over again, and try to figure out how to make a photograph out of them.

Something I said clicked with him. He talked about how he’d go back to the same locations over and over again until he got the shot.

“I hate to even mention it, but it’s kind of zen,” I reluctantly said because it’s never really appropriate to mention zen, but I guess it was the only way I was able to articulate myself.

He said enthusiastically,  ”Yes! It is like zen.”

He mentioned the Sydney light and told him about Los Angeles and how the light seduces you, and leads you around, which started him on all the reflected light he was seeing around New York and how crazy it must be to shoot here.

After awhile, I thought I should probably leave the guy alone, after all I’m sure there were other nerds with Flickr accounts and blogs that probably wanted to say hello, but then he mentioned something about street photography and I respond about some of the stuff going on around the web these days, and we ended up going down another path.

He said that when he first went out into the street 10 years ago, he really knew nothing about what was going, and then Matt Stuart from In-Public contacted him and found all these other people that were shooting and thinking the same way he was, and that’s how he was brought into the wider world of street photography.

We went up for a beer, and talked about his new BW book, and how it was based on a deeply personal event from his past, and was like a tree, with a main trunk and many branches spreading out all over the place.  Someone eventually tapped him on the shoulder and started talking to him.

“Sorry mate,” he said to me while the person started in.

That was sort of my sign that it was time to head back to where Conover was holding court.

“Parke’s a cool guy,” I said.  ”Very philosophical.”

A bit later I was able to tap him on the shoulder again to let him know I enjoyed chatting and that I’d get his email from someone in In-Public.  ”Yeah, yeah, you too mate,” he said as someone pulled him away.

The impression I got while we were conversing was that he feels extremely lucky to be where he’s at, and is probably one of those people that genuinely thinks, “What the hell am I doing in a room with all these people?”  It’s not that he’s not confident in his work.  There’s an intensity and passion within him that’s contagious.  He knows he’s doing what he’s suppose to be doing.  You can tell the creative flame burns deep inside him.

But what impressed me most is that he stood there and conversed with me, and was completely engaged.  It didn’t matter who I was.  He was interested in the ideas, and talking about photography.  It’s hard to fake humility, and from what I hear humility is built into the DNA of Australians.

The End of The Night

We mingled around the rest of the night and I had the opportunity to talk to Andrew Hetherington a bit about his website and publishing on the web. You can read my thoughts over at LPV. I also had a chance to chat with David Alan Harvey a bit and Burn regulars Panos Skoulidas and Chris Bickford, all great guys.

As Conover and I left and headed to a bar for a night cap, the conversation with Parke kept running through my head. I thought to myself, maybe some of the crazy shit I’m thinking isn’t that crazy, in fact, it might be the same crazy shit many photographers are thinking these days.  Hell, Trent Parke is thinking some of this crazy shit, and it seems to be working for him.

Photography is a tough game. It doesn’t matter who you are or how successful you are.  What I learned from my Magnum night is that there’s a unifying spirit and passion amongst certain photographers that transcends any petty disagreements about what’s good, or what’s bad, or who deserves this or that.

When you run into these type of photographers, you’ll know it because they can’t contain their passion.

Maybe Conover should drag me out of Greenpoint more often.

Influences – 2009

The Wire

If this was the decade that television finally became a high art form, then The Wire is the pinnacle.  I can’t remember how it floated onto my radar, but after watching a few episodes of Season 1, I was hooked.  I believe I watched Season 2 straight through and I have no shame is saying that because I know countless others who’ve had a similar experience.  There’s really no way to describe how completely you get immersed in the world The Wire, but when you’re at a party and you meet someone whose just as hooked as you are, you feel like you’re in a secret society whose members have experienced art as ecstasy.  If you don’t believe that a TV show can make someone ramble like a member of a cult, well, I suppose this paragraph is evidence.  Season Five was kind of week, but whatever, it ended awesome.

strange.rs

[vimeo width="719" height="481"]http://www.vimeo.com/7695511[/vimeo]

After toiling with a previous photography collective that fell apart I was a bit skeptical that a group of photographers could collaborate on anything, but for some reason, I decided to give it another go and this time it’s been inspirational.  We have tons of work ahead of us but it’s the type of work I’m looking forward to.

The Flickr Ecosystem

My days of defending Flickr to the critics, and there are many, are over.  There’s no point in it. It’s simply not the way many people want to experience photography on the web, and I understand that.  Through the network of groups and contacts I’ve established over the last few years, I’m able to find new work from photographers all over the globe that inspires, informs and when good, transforms my ideas about photography.  Some good places to go: LPV, Photographs on the Brain, yousuck, HCSP, Contract Killers.

Brooklyn


©Bryan Formhals

I think I first became interested in New York when I started watching Seinfeld in high school.  From there, I progressed to the hustle and bustle dream of Midtown and then to the Upper Eastside of Woody Allen.  Once I entered the working world in the early 2000s, the media world and the Lower Eastside became my new fixation. I was confident Downtown Manhattan was the place for me. Then I moved to Los Angeles.  While in LA my interests slowly evolved from writing to photography and living a writer’s life in New York didn’t seem that appealing any longer.  I started to meet people through photography who lived in Brooklyn and it seemed more my pace at that stage in my life.

When I finally got to Brooklyn, I settled in Greenpoint and it seems about right for me.  It’s a bit off the beaten track, and tough to get to from Manhattan and other parts of Brooklyn which makes it a bit less busy than other parts of the city.  Brooklyn is huge, and confusing, so I haven’t really explored as much as I want to. Hopefully I’ll have plenty of time to do so in the upcoming years.  I do feel more comfortable, and inspired here than I ever did in West Hollywood, although, there are some things about Los Angeles that are rather magical and hard to articulate in words.

Raoul Gatepin


Photograph ©Raoul Gatepin – From the series Piramid

I met Raoul a few years ago when we were both in Los Angeles.  We talked frequently about photography and our ideas for our own work.  His work has always interested me for it’s subtly, humor, great use of color and composition.  He doesn’t do much self-promoting and you won’t find him submitting to contests or portfolio reviews.  It simply doesn’t matter to him.  This year he added two bodies of work to his website, Piramid and Longevity Notion.  While these series may not have the one hit wonders of some his previous work, as self-contained edits, they show an interesting evolution his work that I think is a sign of what’s to come.  I do my best not to mimic him, but damn, it’s hard because his work is so fucking good.

Contax T2

My XA and Bessa R3A both went to the grave this year which kind of sucked.  It was hard for me to get by without a point and shoot film camera. I was kind of over the XA anyway, so when the aforementioned Raoul Gatepin informed me he was selling his Contax T2 I jumped all over it.  It’s a great camera. I love it.  It has some quirks and I would prefer 35mm lens over 38mm but it’s no big thing.  This is the camera that’s in my pocket wherever I go these days.

Thobias Faldt

I asked my friend Hin Chua for a recommendation earlier in the year, and the first name that came out of his mouth was Thobias Faldt.  Much like Lars Tunbjork, you never really know for sure what’s going on his photographs.  Enigmatic is the best word that comes to mind, but there’s also an absurdity that I find a appealing as well.  When I compile my list of books that I want to buy but can’t afford at the moment, Faldt’s Year One will be at the top of the list.

Creative Collaborators

It has been an amazing year for me creatively, not only with my own work, but with la pura vida and strange.rs.  Collaborating with other creatives is never easy and I’ve had several days where I question why I bother but whenever I reflect back on the work I get excited and inspired.  Art and photography can be solitary endeavors, but in my experience, nothing beats a good collaboration with a group of people who are enthusiastic and passionate about what they are doing.  2010 will not be easy but I’m looking forward to it primarily because of the talented people I know I’ll be working with.  Cheers! And Happy New Year!

2008 – Influences

Evidence by Mike Mandal & Larry Sultan

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I remember Hin saying something like, “Evidence is right up your alley Bryan.”  He was right.  This book is perhaps the best example of how editing and sequencing can create a photographic work of art.  Culled from thousands of photos from Government sources, this tight edit takes you on a baffling, funny and somewhat of a nightmarish journey.  It’s a book I went back to over and over again this year, and I always found photographs that looked as if I’ve never seen them before which is a sign of a great photography book.

Vinter by Lars Tunbjork

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I paged through this today and found four amazing photographs I didn’t remember from the last time I paged through it which was about a week ago.  This has happened every time I’ve paged through this book.  It’s an insane book and I’m starting to think Lars is insane himself, but in the best way possible.

The Phlow

photophlow badge

Yes, it’s just a chat a room, but ever since the bulk of my online dialogue has moved over here several months ago, I can say that I’ve found the web much more entertaining.  I kind of wish death upon online forums.  They’re antiquated and tend to be too messy.  In chat rooms you need to be concise and quick.  You can share new information in real time.  The conversations are more dynamic.  Of course much of this has to do with the malcontents who frequent the room.  It may seem like just chat, but the flow of information and ideas in the room makes me feel like a Web 3.0 type of salon.  Everyone is welcome, just be warned it’s not for anyone whose easily offended.

Hin Chua

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You can give him practically any key words and he’ll be able to recommend a handful of books.  And if he knows your taste, they’ll be tailored to it.  I can’t imagine there’s a more studious, hard working photographer out there these days.  A true photographer’s photographer as well.  Always willing to engage in debates about projects, scanning, books, photographers, you name it.  If you’ve been watching his current project ‘After the Fall’ evolve the last couple years I’m fairly certain you’ll feel the same as I do:  It’s a privilege to watch this project evolve.