André Kertész | The Distortions, 1933

Posted: March 11th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Books, Film, Photography

Distortion Number 40, Andre Kertesz

Distortion Number 40, Andre Kertesz

A Hungarian friend of mine introduced me to the editor of the magazine “Le Sourire,” a very French sort of magazine–satiric, risqué. Many artists worked for this publication. They had never published photos before. The editor asked me to do something. I bought two distorting mirrors in the flea market–the kind of thing you find in amusement parks. With existing light and an old lens invented by Hugo Meyer, I achieved amusing impressions. Some images like sculptures, others grotesque and frightening. I took about 140 photographs in a month, working two or three times a week. “Le Sourire” published a couple of them, and we planned a book, but it had to wait forty years to be published–but that is another story.

-André Kertész, Kertész on Kertész


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Tom Palumbo | Paris 1962

Posted: January 26th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Film, Photography

An amazing series of candids shot by the fashion photographer Tom Palumbo in Paris, 1962.

Images from Paris cafés and nightlife in 1962, the same week Yves St. Laurent’s runway show vaulted Dior to new heights.

Many scenes around Les Halles (which no longer exists as it did then).

-Tom Palumbo

Interlude, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Interlude, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Eye Shadow, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Eye Shadow, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Pink Scarf, Cigarette, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Pink Scarf, Cigarette, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Model & Her Pet, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Model & Her Pet, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

A Perfect Pour, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

A Perfect Pour, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Gout de vin, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Gout de vin, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Cheers, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Cheers, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Kissing the Hand, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Kissing the Hand, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Pout, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Pout, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Trapped, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Trapped, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

At the bar, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

At the bar, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Like Audrey, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Like Audrey, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Powder, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Powder, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Cafe Flirting, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Cafe Flirting, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Laughter & Cake, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Laughter & Cake, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

After Dinner, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

After Dinner, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Young Lovers, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Young Lovers, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Impulsive Kiss, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Impulsive Kiss, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Young Lovers Embrace, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Young Lovers Embrace, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Bella, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Bella, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Bite, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Bite, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

And the girls get drunk..., Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

And the girls get drunk..., Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

That time of night, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

That time of night, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Light, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962

Light, Tom Palumbo, Paris 1962


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André Kertész | Champs Elysées, Paris, 1929

Posted: January 22nd, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Books, Film, Photography, Quotes

André Kertész | <i>Champs Elysées, Paris, 1929</i>

André Kertész | Champs Elysées, Paris, 1929

At the time photography was zero — only the ordinary commercial kind of shots with little or no artistic value. Nobody photographed the chairs in the parks, in the Luxembourg Gardens, and in the Tuileries. I did. Of course, at that time I did not know that this was modern or unique.

-André Kertész, Kertész on Kertész


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André Kertész | Jardin Du Luxembourg, Paris

Posted: January 14th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Books, Film, Photography, Quotes

André Kertész | <i>Jardin Du Luxembourg, Paris, 1925</i>

André Kertész | Jardin Du Luxembourg, Paris, 1925

I went walking with a painter friend of mine who was a deaf mute, and I saw those chairs on the Champs Elysées and started to photograph them. He went berserk and signaled to me that I am crazy. but when he saw the result he understood what I was after. This was my first photograph of the chairs.

-André Kertész, Kertész on Kertész


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Ellen Von Unwerth |Motion & Blur

Posted: January 4th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Film, Photography

There is a technique that Ellen Von Unwerth continually revisits that I’ve never seen any other pro shooter use to such great effect. Utilizing slow shutter speeds, many times she will allow the facial features of her models to be blurred, smeared across the frame, giving a sense of motion and liveliness to her photos.

Understand that this is completely different and separate from an image that is entirely out of focus or blurred due to movement or camera shake which are common techniques. The face is normally considered inviolate and no matter what else is happening, should always be in focus as it is the primary focal point. She turns this maxim on its head by keeping the frame in focus but with shutter speeds slow enough (1/60 of a second or greater) that allow her subject’s face to blur.

This gives her images such vitality, capturing the movement from one fraction of a second to the next, telling the viewer that during this image, things were occurring, the models were in the middle of something, moving onto the next moment. Reminiscent of Francis Bacon, this distortion of the face is many times subtle, sometimes overpowering, and is never at the expense of the mood or expression of the subjects.

I’ve never seen anyone else use this specific technique so effectively again and again. I’ve tried it a few times and my images are just blurred faces with none of the magic Unwerth creates.

I have included the first image for comparison. It is a typical blurred image due to the movement of the subjects within the frame. The following images, however, feature this motion blur constrained to the face.

Wendybird -Kirsten Dunst & Erin Fetherston, Ellen Von Unwerth

Wendybird - Kirsten Dunst & Erin Fetherston, Ellen Von Unwerth

Clash of the Titans - David Bowie 2003, Ellen Von Unwerth

Clash of the Titans - David Bowie 2003, Ellen Von Unwerth

Ein Deinstag-Morgen in Paris with Heike Makatsch, Ellen Von Unwerth

Ein Deinstag-Morgen in Paris with Heike Makatsch, Ellen Von Unwerth

Little Miss Precious with Kemp Muhl 2009 by Ellen Von Unwerth

Little Miss Precious with Kemp Muhl 2009 by Ellen Von Unwerth

Adriana Lima 205 by Ellen Von Unwerth

Adriana Lima 205 by Ellen Von Unwerth

How to Get Ahead in Hollywood with Milla Jovovich 1997 by Ellen Von Unwerth

How to Get Ahead in Hollywood with Milla Jovovich 1997 by Ellen Von Unwerth

How to Get Ahead in Hollywood with Milla Jovovich 1997 by Ellen Von Unwerth

How to Get Ahead in Hollywood with Milla Jovovich 1997 by Ellen Von Unwerth

From Fräulein by Ellen Von Unwerth; Taschen 2009

From Fräulein by Ellen Von Unwerth; Taschen 2009

Bridget Hall by Ellen Von Unwerth

Bridget Hall by Ellen Von Unwerth

Christina Aguilera by Ellen Von Unwerth

Christina Aguilera by Ellen Von Unwerth

Bojana Panic by Ellen Von Unwerth

Bojana Panic by Ellen Von Unwerth

Mylène Farmer: Pardonne-Moi, 2001 by Ellen Von Unwerth

Mylène Farmer: Pardonne-Moi, 2001 by Ellen Von Unwerth

Nadja Auermann by Ellen Von Unwerth

Nadja Auermann by Ellen Von Unwerth

Zooey Deschanel by Ellen Von Unwerth

Zooey Deschanel by Ellen Von Unwerth

Katharine McPhee by Ellen Von Unwerth

Katharine McPhee by Ellen Von Unwerth

Sasha Pivovarova by Ellen Von Unwerth

Sasha Pivovarova by Ellen Von Unwerth

Nina Brosh by Ellen Von Unwerth

Nina Brosh by Ellen Von Unwerth


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André Kertész | Eiffel Tower, Paris, 1929

Posted: December 29th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Books, Film, Photography, Quotes

André Kertész | <i>Eiffel Tower, Paris, 1929</i>

André Kertész | Eiffel Tower, Paris, 1929

I like high shots. If you are on the same level you lose many things.

-André Kertész, Kertész on Kertész


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Robert Doisneau & André Kertész

Posted: December 27th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Film, Photography, Quotes

Les Amoureux aux Poireaux, 1950 © Robert Doisneau

Les Amoureux aux Poireaux, 1950 © Robert Doisneau

A hundredth of a second here, a hundredth of a second there–even if you put them end to end, they still only add up to one, two, perhaps three seconds, snatched from eternity.

-Doisneau Robert

Lovers, Budapest, 1915 © André Kertész

Lovers, Budapest, 1915 © André Kertész

Everything is a subject. Every subject has a rhythm. To feel it is the raison d’être. The photograph is a fixed moment of such a raison d’être, which lives on in itself.

-André Kertész

Robert Doisneau and André Kertész in Arles, France, 1975 © Wolfgang H. Wögerer

Robert Doisneau and André Kertész in Arles, France, 1975 © Wolfgang H. Wögerer


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Henri Cartier-Bresson | Paris, Part One

Posted: June 12th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Film, Leica, Photography, Quotes

PARIS—Brasserie Lipp on St.-Germain-des-Prés, 1969. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—Brasserie Lipp on St.-Germain-des-Prés, 1969. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

In photography, the smallest thing can be a great subject. The little, human detail can become a Leitmotiv.

-Henri Cartier-Bresson

PARIS—Boulevard Diderot, 1969. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—Boulevard Diderot, 1969. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—Place de la Sorbonne, May 1968. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—Place de la Sorbonne, May 1968. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—A march in support of French President Charles De Gaulle on the Champs-Elysees, from the Place de la Concorde to the Arc de Triomphe, May 1968. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—A march in support of French President Charles De Gaulle on the Champs-Elysees, from the Place de la Concorde to the Arc de Triomphe, May 1968. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS, France—The events of May 1968 on the Champs-Élysées. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS, France—The events of May 1968 on the Champs-Élysées. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—A demonstration, May 1, 1971. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—A demonstration, May 1, 1971. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—Notre-Dame de Paris, 1952-53. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—Notre-Dame de Paris, 1952-53. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—The Gare du Nord, 1955. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—The Gare du Nord, 1955. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—The Latin Quarter, 1952. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—The Latin Quarter, 1952. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—1968. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—1968. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—1932. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—1932. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—Galeries Lafayette, 1968. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—Galeries Lafayette, 1968. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos


PARIS—1967. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—1967. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—Galeries Lafayette department store, 1967.  © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos

PARIS—Galeries Lafayette department store, 1967. © Henri Cartier-Bresson / Magnum Photos


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Dennis Hopper, 1936 – 2010

Posted: May 31st, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Cinema, Film, Los Angeles, Nikon, Photography, Quotes

Paul Newman, 1964 © Dennis Hopper

Paul Newman, 1964 © Dennis Hopper

I was a compulsive shooter back then. I was very shy, and it was a lot easier for me to communicate if I had a camera between me and other people.

-Dennis Hopper

Paris Woman, 1994 © Dennis Hopper

Paris Woman, 1994 © Dennis Hopper

I had been taking photographs because I hoped to be able to direct movies. That’s why I never cropped any of the photographs; they are all full-frame.

-Dennis Hopper

Jane Fonda, 1967 © Dennis Hopper

Jane Fonda, 1967 © Dennis Hopper

Like all artists I want to cheat death a little and contribute something to the next generation.

-Dennis Hopper

Bill Cosby (Chateau Marmont), 1965 © Dennis Hopper

Bill Cosby (Chateau Marmont), 1965 © Dennis Hopper

… but I was trying to go another way from the movie business. And I was taking pictures in black-and-white. Everyone else was using color. I was using Tri-X because I could shoot at night, and get shots by holding it real still, with just streetlights and so on. So these were things that I was playing with. But at the same time, a lot of my ideas were glamour ideas, because I wanted people to look good. So my portraits were about them in natural light, looking good, and looking in some way that had something to do with the reality of their world.

-Dennis Hopper

Jefferson Airplane, 1965 © Dennis Hopper

Jefferson Airplane, 1965 © Dennis Hopper

There are moments that I`ve had some real brilliance, you know. But I think they are moments. And sometimes, in a career, moments are enough. I never felt I played the great part. I never felt that I directed the great movie. And I can`t say that it`s anybody`s fault but my own.

-Dennis Hopper

Robert Rauschenberg, 1966 © Dennis Hopper

Robert Rauschenberg, 1966 © Dennis Hopper

You know, the history of California art doesn’t start until about 1961, and that’s when these photographs start. I mean, we have no history out here.

-Dennis Hopper

Brian Jones, 1965 © Dennis Hopper

Brian Jones, 1965 © Dennis Hopper

Most of the guys who were heavy on drugs and stuff — the rockers, and all that — we’re all out playing golf and we’re all sober. It is weird.

-Dennis Hopper

Tuesday Weld, 1965 © Dennis Hopper

Tuesday Weld, 1965 © Dennis Hopper

The high points have not been that many, but I’m a compulsive creator so I don’t think of the children first, I think of the work. Let’s see, I guess, Easy Rider, Blue Velvet, a couple of photographs here, a couple of paintings . . . those are the things that I would be proud of and yet they ’re so minimal in this vast body of crap — most of the 150 films I’ve been in — this river of shit that I’ve tried to make gold out of. Very honestly.

-Dennis Hopper

Jean Tinguely, 1963 © Dennis Hopper

Jean Tinguely, 1963 © Dennis Hopper

Then I had Easy Rider, and I couldn’t get another movie, so I lived in Mexico City for a couple of years. I lived in Paris for a couple of years. I didn’t take any photographs, and then I went to Japan and saw a Nikon used. I bought it, and I just started, like an alcoholic. I shot 300 rolls of film. That was the beginning of me starting again, and then I went digital.

-Dennis Hopper

Biker Couple, 1961 © Dennis Hopper

Biker Couple, 1961 © Dennis Hopper

I’d love to be in a Coen Brothers film, or something by Curtis Hanson — did you see 8 Mile? a terrific little movie — but I’ve never worked for Lucas or Spielberg. You could name most of the directors in Hollywood I’ve never worked for. I am not offered any of the roles that Jack Nicholson gets or Warren Beatty gets, or any of these people get, and never have been and never will. So when you ask me about playing villains and would I like to play other things, I think, God, I’m just lucky if I get a villain part every once in a while.

-Dennis Hopper

Biker, 1961 © Dennis Hopper

Biker, 1961 © Dennis Hopper

I think of that with my photographs. I think of them as ‘found’ paintings because I don’t crop them, I don’t manipulate them or anything. So they’re like ‘found’ objects to me.

-Dennis Hopper

Bruce Conner (in tub), Toni Basil, Teri Garr and Ann Marshall, 1964 © Dennis Hopper

Bruce Conner (in tub), Toni Basil, Teri Garr and Ann Marshall, 1964 © Dennis Hopper

When it first started, it was inferior and the inks weren’t archival. As soon as the inks became archival, I went digital. To me, it’s like the difference between developing something in chemical or being able to spray the light. It’s like painting with light, and the computer is reading the light. When a digital photograph looks right, it looks like it was painted.

-Dennis Hopper

Claes Oldenburg (Portrait with Cake Slices), 1965 © Dennis Hopper

Claes Oldenburg (Portrait with Cake Slices), 1965 © Dennis Hopper

I started out shooting flat, on walls, so that it had no depth of field, because I was being photographed all the time as an actor. And if you notice, there aren’t a lot of photographs [in the show] of actors — Dean Stockwell, Paul Newman. I thought I was an imposition to the actors who were being photographed all the time. I really wanted the flat-on-painter kind of surface. I did that for a long time. Then the artists. I really started taking photographs of artists. They wanted me to take photographs. They wanted posters and things. I was hanging out with them. I photographed the ones I thought were going to make it. I wasn’t really working as an actor during this period, and I thought, Well, if I’m not going to be able to work as an actor, I might as well be able make something that’s going to be credible. So I took photographs of Martin Luther King and Selma, Montgomery, as history, and selecting artists that I thought would make it. I met most of the Pop artists before they ever had shows.

-Dennis Hopper

Andy Warhol and members of the Factory (Gregory Markopoulos, Taylor Mead, Gerard Malanga & Jack Smith), 1963 © Dennis Hopper

Andy Warhol and members of the Factory (Gregory Markopoulos, Taylor Mead, Gerard Malanga & Jack Smith), 1963 © Dennis Hopper

I didn’t use a light meter; I just read the light off my hands. So the light varies, and there are some dark images. Also, I’m sort of a nervous person with the camera, so I will just shoot arbitrarily until I can focus and compose something, and then I make a shot. So generally, in those proof sheets, there are only three or four really concentrated efforts to take a photograph. It’s not like a professional kind of person who sets it up so every photograph looks really cool.

-Dennis Hopper

Ed Ruscha, 1964 © Dennis Hopper

Ed Ruscha, 1964 © Dennis Hopper

Well, I was a compulsive creator, so it became my creative outlet. I was using Tri-X film — which nobody else was using at the time — because I wanted to get as much natural light as possible and be able to shoot everything in natural light without flashes. I was a product of the movie business …

-Dennis Hopper

Irving Blum and Peggy Moffitt, 1964 © Dennis Hopper

Irving Blum and Peggy Moffitt, 1964 © Dennis Hopper

I was doing something that I thought could have some impact someday. In many ways, it’s really these photographs that kept me going creatively.

-Dennis Hopper

Self-portrait at porn stand, 1962, © Dennis Hopper

Self-portrait at porn stand, 1962, © Dennis Hopper

I am just a middle-class farm boy from Dodge City and my grandparents were wheat farmers. I thought painting, acting, directing and photography were all part of being an artist. I have made my money that way. And I have had some fun. It’s not been a bad life.

-Dennis Hopper


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Ellen von Unwerth | Jean Seberg

Posted: May 25th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Books, Cinema, Photography, Quotes

For more than twenty-five years, Ellen Von Unwerth has celebrated movies through her fashion photography. Her photographs are generally straightforward, without special effects of the allusion to a more complicated narrative; she simply uses characters from noted films as the protagonists of her fashion essays, such as the piece for the October 1990 issue of Vogue (available here, wm) in which models are used to reincarnate Jean Seberg and Jean-Paul Belmondo in Jean-Luc Godard’s New Wave counterculture film Breathless (1959). Von Unwerth’s fashion essay concentrates on the breezy life of the doomed lovers as they tool around Paris riding a motor scooter, smoke at cafés, and snuggle in bed. Von Unwerth exploits readers’ identification with the characters in the film, especially the generation that came of age in the 1960s, when European culture and bohemian antiestablishment lifestyle were the vogue. More specifically, the New Wave French films radically changed the way movies were made. They were consonant with the disjunctive and nonlinear literature of the time. Their off-beat characters (often based on American movie gangsters) and the details of their behavior and dress helped create an identity for members of the American couterculture.

-Susan Kismaric & Eva Respini, Fashioning Fiction

<i>Jean Seberg</i> with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

Jean Seberg with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

<i>Jean Seberg</i> with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

Jean Seberg with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

<i>Jean Seberg</i> with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

Jean Seberg with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

<i>Jean Seberg</i> with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

Jean Seberg with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

<i>Jean Seberg</i> with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

Jean Seberg with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

<i>Jean Seberg</i> with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

Jean Seberg with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

<i>Jean Seberg</i> with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

Jean Seberg with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

<i>Jean Seberg</i> with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

Jean Seberg with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

<i>Jean Seberg</i> with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

Jean Seberg with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

<i>Jean Seberg</i> with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth

Jean Seberg with Christy Turlington, October, 1990 Vogue, Ellen von Unwerth


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