December 3, 2012

The Three Stories Behind the Image

Story Number One:

I was 16 years old and living in Anaheim California. I had this idea for an image, a gull flying against a clouded moon, but I couldn’t find a way to create the image with a single shot. So I decided to combine two images, not as a double exposure captured in-camera, but by combining two images in the darkroom. Composites are easily done in today’s digital world, but they were not easily done back in 1970. Back in the “old days” I would sandwich the two negatives together in the enlarger and project them as a single image.

The first image was taken at night in the local K-Mart parking lot. I took a series of shots with clouds floating past the moon. I had this idea (vision) in my head of what the final image would look like and so I placed the moon and clouds on the right and left room for the sea gull on the left. The shot of the sea gull was taken later during the daytime in my high school parking lot, I shot a series of gulls looking straight up. Working from memory of where I had placed the moon and cloud in the frame, I positioned the gull on the left.

After I processed the negatives, I had to find two images that would work together, not just in terms of composition but also exposure. Getting a good print with this method is a challenge since you have two negatives that may have different printing needs, but you must print them together as one.

I named the image “Gull and Moon” and while I loved the composition, I was never able to get the blacks that I envisioned, the print was very muddy.

Story Number Two: 

I was new to Loara High School and had joined the Yearbook staff as a photographer. The new yearbook advisor was John Holland the photography teacher, he became and remained a friend and mentor until last year when he passed away. What was so very different about John was that he encouraged us to create fine art images for the yearbook, not just pictures of the football players, cheerleaders and cheesecake shots. This was fun (!) and we had a wonderful time creating artistic images for the yearbook including my “Shoes” (above) which was prominently featured.

Unfortunately neither John nor any of us really stopped to consider why people purchased yearbooks. It was not for fine art images but for the pictures of the football players, cheerleaders and cheesecake shots! When the yearbooks arrived and were being handed out there was a near riot as the football players angrily confronted the yearbook staff. I was a junior (and small for my age) and I remember slowly slinking out through the back of the crowd and hiding in the photography room. I made myself scarce for several days.

Story Number Three:

After high school and for 30 years after, I focused on family and career and neglected my photography. During those years we moved several times and with each move I threw out more and more old things, including much of my photography. When I returned to photography around 2004 I wanted to feature some of my earlier work on my website and I began searching for anything that might have survived.

Most of my negatives were gone and only a few prints survived, in fact only 13 remained from all those years of work. Most of these images survived only because a single print was still around, and this was the case with “Mary at Corona.” I found a single 8 x 10, poorly printed and curled up print. This has always been a special image to me and I so set about the task of restoring it.

I scanned the image and worked on it in Photoshop. I was pleasantly surprised because not only was I able to restore the image, but I was able to bring it into compliance with my original vision, something I was never able to do in the darkroom!  Just tonight I was comparing the original to the restored version and it reminded me of why I love digital.

If you are interested, you can see those restored images from my early years here:  https://colethompsonphotography.com/portfolios/collections/1970s/

Recounting the story behind this image reminded me of the many lessons that I learned from this experience. 

  1. Vision is the most important ingredient of a great image.
  2. Yearbooks are for documentary work, not fine art photography. 
  3. Focus on the creative early on, it’s more important than the technical which can be learned quite easily.
  4. Don’t throw things away when you are young, you’ll regret it later. 
  5. If you have an image that you cannot get just right, keep working on it.

 

 

10 thoughts on “The Three Stories Behind the Image

  1. I enjoyed this insightful post and also had my own “take-away” lesson from it: Encourage young people and if opportunity presents itself, be that mentor. In my experience, it is tremendously gratifying to put that knowledge and experience to good use. Just look at what Cole shares in his blog and how good it feels to receive it. Now pay it forward with a young artist!

  2. As usual, a great read Cole… brought back my own experience as a yearbook photographer and fond memories of having had a similar mentor who provided me with many invaluable insights.

    It is… all about sharing.

  3. The recommendations at the end were vert good. I agree that getting the shot you have visualized in you mind is much more important that mastering the techincl end of picture taking.

  4. I can really relate to your third story. I was working as a news photographer for many years and was pushed into early retirement in that position. With family oblications I had to work in a another field for many years and eventully got away from my love of creating pictures.I eventually came back to making images. Photography is an inner calling to creat.

  5. The photo and its message is really interesting. You do have great talent in photography. By looking at the photo and how you talk about it, I can feel that you are really passionate about it.

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  7. Fascinating images in B&W. Stark realities and yet very alien in some.

    Loara was a great high school, I had friends that attended Loara. Had I chosen to continue my education, I would have been a rival at Anaheim High.

    The starkness of the photographs as shown in a B&W format is brilliant. Death Valley could not look more alien. Oregon more majestic or Anaheim so like home again. Beautiful work, thank you for sharing. I believe I will come here to visit often to reflect at the wonder you have captured with your lens and your tools. Brava!

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