
Greenpoint, Brooklyn – Host, Kramer O’Neill

Emily Weinstein and Jared Iorio
Kramer hosted a New Year’s Eve party. Drinks, Apples to Apples, a few photos, a New Year.

Greenpoint, Brooklyn – Host, Kramer O’Neill

Emily Weinstein and Jared Iorio
Kramer hosted a New Year’s Eve party. Drinks, Apples to Apples, a few photos, a New Year.
Sometime a few years ago I read that Trent Parke used Delta 100 and pushed the shit out of it. Reading this meant I had to have the film, even though I had no dark room skills to speak off. At the time I was shooting Trix, Delta 3200 and Neopan 1600, and had no idea what I was doing, but it didn’t matter really because I was just burning through film making photographs.
I bought this Delta 100 and thought I’d try to be Trent Parke, but after about one roll I decided I wasn’t going to push the shit out of the film and had no intention of learning the dark room at my age. Exposing for 100 speed film even in the nice California light was too much for me. I needed fast film, so the Delta went into the fridge and followed me around for a few years.
As the summer of 2009 came to a close I was running out of film and tired of shooting 35mm color. I’d spent a good time wandering around shooting 120 color and found a groove that made sense to me. But I’m rarely satisfied doing one thing at a time, and I had grown to love shooting with the Contax T2. I needed something else. I’ve always dreaded winter (why I moved to California in the first place), so I looked in the fridge and saw these seven rolls of Delta 100 staring at me and figured, why the hell not. I loaded up the Contax and a vague idea for a project.
It didn’t start well. I took some night strolls and flashed random shit, but never really what I wanted to photograph, or what tone I was going for. I shot two rolls, got them developed, then scanned them. Two or three photographs caught my attention. They fueled my initial idea, so I went out again, at night wandering around. It was still a struggle, but I was determined to keep shooting. I knew that feeling nothing was something. This was the inspiration. Fight. Move forward. Make photographs, something will happen.
As with all ideas, the initial stages are the most difficult, but eventually you fight through them and through scanning and editing you start to see patterns, ideas emerging. This is the exciting part for me. Once I have images to work with I can go back into the field and refine the ideas. I feel this is something that’s been trilled into my mind by watching Hin Chua over the years. Repetition, persistence, hustle, and above else, photographing even when you don’t feel like it.
I burned through those initial rolls and ended up buying more. Now the project is a passion. The last couple of weeks every time I leave the apartment I can barely believe what I’m seeing. I just dropped off four rolls at the lab. I don’t remember what is on them, well kind of, in that magical way of photography. There will banality, misfires, missed opportunities, but I know there will money shots and building blocks. Whenever you think photography has abandoned you, it taps you on the shoulder and reminds you why you do it.
Over the last few months I’ve went back and put all my medium format work into one project pile. After doing some processing and editing, I started to get an idea of what I wanted to do with the work. At this point, I’m reluctant to try to articulate where I’m going with words. Instead I just want to keep shooting and compiling work. I’d like to let this project breath a bit more and not confine with words or overly cumbersome concepts (not that I’ve ever been overly conceptual.) I’ll keep this going on a separate track as Brooklyn Jukebox, both of which I plan on working on over the course of the year. Probably starting again in the spring. I’ve put a few rolls of black and white through the Contax this fall and winter for another idea. It’s too cold to think about color, and black and white is always fun, if not completely baffling.
I’ve put up an edit of Brooklyn Jukebox, which is my 35mm work from the time I arrived in New York in February (2009) until now. I’m not sure if I’m going to shoot more color this winter but I’ll probably keep this project going for awhile, granted I’m able to survive in New York for a bit longer. After I ditched my Drift edit, I broke it up into two projects, this one, and then the 120 work started to coalesce around another idea that has developed over the summer. I’m still editing and processing that work, and will put up an edit as some point.
I went to Coney Island once this summer and wasn’t really into it. I prefer Venice Beach which is equally as cheesy but the surrounding neighborhood is kind of interesting to get lost in for an afternoon. And really, that light and the Pacific as the sun goes down just can’t be beat.