Showing posts with label BW. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BW. Show all posts

Monday, February 13, 2012

Monochrome Monday (homage)


Q.   Who would have thought that putting bagpipes with electric guitars would result in a rock hit?

A.   Ronald Belford "Bon" Scott (RIP) and his fellow Scottish expats, Angus and Malcolm Young of the Oz band AC/DC, when they recorded "It's a Long Way to Top (If You Want to Rock n Roll)" 36 years ago.
What a crazy journey from Sctotland to Freemantle Prison to international fame and then back to "Freo" cast in bronze. Not many rockers can claim that. That's Bon above, still attracting the birds in Freo, 30 years after his death.


"Ridin' down the highway 
Goin' to a show 
Stop in all the by-ways 
Playin' rock 'n' roll 
Gettin' robbed 
Gettin' stoned 
Gettin' beat up 
Broken boned 
Gettin' had 
Gettin' took 
I tell you folks 
It's harder than it looks"
from AC/DC "It's a Long Way to the Top (If You Want to Rock n Roll)" 1976


Monday, February 6, 2012

Monochrome Monday (Mourning)

Today's post dedicated to the family and friends of the surfer who drowned at Moffs on the weekend.

Friday, January 20, 2012

Serendipity

I suppose I have neglected to post much bloggage about the body surfing element of the brine experience in the last couple of years. Laziness? Lack of imagery? Maybe it's too special and too much fun to try and package up, break down, over-analyse? I have caught gazillions of waves with just my feet and hands over the years and I don't recall it being hassle (apart from my lung capacity) like board surfing can be on crowded days. And really, some days are just more body-friendly than board friendly.
So it was serendipity when three seemingly unconnected images crossed my path this week. Working on the mono one from WA last week (top), I received a cracker from a mate's session a few weeks back and then I came across the trailer for the body surfing movie Come Hell or High Water (Patagonia/Keith Malloy). Serendipity. Have a wet weekend.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Yeah!

Big Corey Harris-Wilde from the too much fun collective patiently modeling between "sets" on a flattish day in the Indian Ocean.

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Queen Mono

"Unearthed by John Maloof in 2007 at a local auction house in Chicago, Maier is only now beginning to be recognized as an iconic street photographer from the 40’s, through the 70’s. A body of work that spans not only the US, but the globe, Maier took more than 2,000 rolls of film, printed over 3,000 photographs and produced more than 150,000 negatives representing the street life and architecture of New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, and the American Southwest, as well as destinations as far off as Manila, Bangkok, Beijing, Egypt, and Italy.

Invested in her bird’s eye view of the people who made industrious cities thrive and pulse, Maier captures gentle and poignant moments between parents and children, the disenfranchised and forgotten, in a country on the verge of social and political upheaval. Maier recorded historic landmarks and their demolition as developments were built to replace them over decades."
Images by Vivian Maier (RIP). Copyright Maloof Collection, USA. Text from Maloof Official Maier site.
US West coast exhibition at Merry Karnowsky Gallery US East Coast exhibition at Howard Greenberg Gallery.
"Maier’s ability to grab the right frame at exactly the right moment, with elements of lighting, movement and essence all aligning, is revealed in the remarkable fact that she seldom shot more than one picture of the same moment in time. An intensely private person who kept most of her work hidden, Maier also created a series of homemade documentary films and audio recordings that have yet to be released to the public.

Having worked as a nanny most of her adult life, Maier was described by those she cared for as “a free spirit, but also a proud soul,” - “a quasi Mary Poppins figure.” She was, in the accounts of the families for whom she worked, very private, spending her days off walking the street taking photographs most often with a Rolleiflex camera. At the end of her life Maier became impoverished, but several children she had cared for pooled their money together and paid for an apartment and other necessities in her later years. Unbeknownst to them, a storage locker that contained a slew of negatives Maier had secretly hidden away was auctioned off due to delinquent payments.

Maier died in 2009 at the age of 83, before the extent of her legacy had been fully understood or revealed.

The Maloof collection is comprised of roughly 90% of Vivian Maier’s work, which has been meticulously reconstructed, archived and catalogued. The collection consists of 100,000 to 150,000 negatives, over 3,000 vintage prints, hundreds of rolls of film, home movies, audio tape interviews, original cameras of Vivian Maier, documents and various other items."

Monday, January 2, 2012

Monochrome Monday (MMXII)

Happy MMXII. 
May it bring you 
many pleasant surprises.

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Hughie Don't Surf

Hughie don't surf no more. In fact he never stood up on a board like the Duke. He preferred to glide along the wave unencumbered by fibreglass and wax. He taught me to sail a boat, to spot a rip, to draw and sang me to sleep with ancient Irish lullabies when I was a kid. Happy Birthday Dad (RIP).

Friday, December 2, 2011

Summer Koan #5 (in A minor)

the hum of air con
eye gouging shimmer at dawn
"Hello Summertime!"