View My Stats

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Let it snow!

I do love the holidays, and these are fun! They exercise my design muscles.



Figure shot in the studio; everything else is CG.



Sunday, December 4, 2011

David, T-shirt pose

Next we tried the classic T-Shirt pose.





Sorry about yesterday.  I got preoccupied and didn't post.

Friday, December 2, 2011

Figure in Bed

We tried everything.  Here is our attempt at a sexy boudoir shot.


Now that I look at it again, it's not bad, for what it is.



Shot in low light, desaturated color.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

David, Blindfolded

We discussed the problem of facial expression at length, and David thought perhaps it was simply that he was shy of the camera, so we tried a blindfold.



Wednesday, November 30, 2011

David, fireplace

I know it may seem I'm picking on David, but I'm really not.  I've always felt that a good photographer can photograph anyone, regardless of his or her expertise as a model. David presented a challenge, and as an artist and photographer, it was a problem I wanted to solve.


Besides the issue of his expression, David was tall and angular, with few curves, and he was not experienced enough to know how to break up his lines.


Here I have posed him in an attempt to alleviate these issues, but it seems forced.



Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Monday, November 28, 2011

David, Torso

Please forgive yesterday's rant.  Censorship upsets me.


And now, back to David.  His first shoot was a disaster, although I did get the one image.  By his second shoot I had begun to realize that careful posing was necessary if I was to get anything usable.


As I mentioned, David was taller than I usually shoot, and that presents a different set of problems.


But it was his facial expression that was the biggest difficulty.  I attempted to solve this with shadow and pose.



Shot digitally in low light.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

A small rant

I am a paying member of an on-line site that provides exposure and a clearing house of sorts for models and photographers.  The site is called (unfortunately) Model Mayhem.


The image below has been posted on the site - accessible only to members - since last February.  Today it was removed, citing the rule against the "non-flaccid" penis.


Censorship is alive and well.



Shot digitally with a one-light source, sepia toned.

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Figure

A new model, with a back-story.


I had a shoot scheduled with my favorite model, Brandon. (Sunday, September 18, 2011)  He called an hour before to say he had a conflict and couldn't make it, but he had a friend who wanted to sub for him.  He had never posed before, but he really wanted the experience.  Since I was already set up, I agreed.


The model, who I will call "David", because that is his name, showed up about a half-hour late - a sign of things to come.  As I recall, it was March, and still a little chilly, but David was wearing a plaid flannel shirt, long-sleeved, buttoned to the wrist and the neck.  Not a good sign.


I attempted to warm him up with a series of clothed head shots, and after a few of these I suggested that maybe he could unbutton the top two or three buttons of his shirt.  He reluctantly complied, only to reveal another shirt - this time a long-sleeved rugby - underneath, also buttoned to the top button.


It took me about half an hour to get his clothes off, and even then I had to practically pry off his socks.  (He was self-conscious about his feet.)


Things weren't going well.  He was tall - a little under six feet - and well but not over muscled.  A nice body.  But his face, although attractive, was contorted in a mask of what can only be described as sheer terror.


I tried every trick I could think of to put him at his ease, but nothing worked.


Finally, after nearly an hour, I just gave up and turned him around.  The result is this image, which is one of my favorites.


MORAL:  Keep shooting.


I have worked with David now for four years, and it's still a struggle every time, but there will be other images of him.  Some will be surprising.



Shot with digital with a one-light set-up, sepia toned.

Friday, November 25, 2011

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Happy Thanksgiving!


Just for fun, for my American friends and those of you around the world.


Figure shot in the studio, background digitally manipulated.

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Friday, November 18, 2011

Happy Birthday, Rob

I didn't forget.  I sometimes wish I could.



Shot on the Massachusetts shore, August 2008.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Figure in the Studio

A shoot with a young model who had never posed for nudes.  Nevertheless he photographed well and took direction.


The only glitch was that he had been over-zealous and inexpert with his "manscaping", shaving his chest smooth to an artificially straight line at his pubes, but leaving his arms and legs.  The result was somewhat disconcerting.


Unfortunately, this is typical of the inexperienced model.  Personally, I prefer everything to be left natural; I feel it photographs better, and looks less pre-meditated.  


More about that later.



Monday, November 14, 2011

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Figure on Gray

The model on a gray background.  An entirely different mood.



Again, the model could not show his face, and the challenge was to produce an image that was believable, and that did not looked forced.

I leave it to you to decide to what degree I succeeded.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Figure on White

The second in a series.  When there is a reason to hide a model's face, the emotional content of the image must come from somewhere else.  


In this case, the tension of the pose.



Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Figure on White

After years of working mainly out of my home, I finally got my first real studio, a small building in a historic section of Houston, originally built some sixty years ago as a storage building.  It was crude and basic, freezing in the winter and burning up in the summer, but it had wonderful space and light, and I was able to create in ways I had never been able to before.


One of my first models in this space was someone who, for professional reasons, could not allow his face to show in nudes.


Never an optimum situation, I was determined to make the best of it, and produced a series beginning with the image below:



Photographed in high-key light against a white paper background.



Sunday, November 6, 2011

A Collection of Heads

Something a little different, and a little out of sequence, a montage of actor's head shots:






Saturday, November 5, 2011

A Different Light, The Blue Hat


During a shoot at the model's home, we went up into the attic looking for props.  He found a blue tam that he got from the Cirque de Soliel.  

As we started to leave, I noticed the quality of light coming from the attic window, and quickly posed and shot this image.

Friday, November 4, 2011

Figure in Light

I love photographing in a light-filled space.  In this shoot, we were moving the model into his new apartment.  It was empty and white, with just the mattress on the floor.  A perfect location, and a perfect time.


End of this series.

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Figure at the Window


The same shoot and location as yesterday, a contemplative moment.


No Photoshop, no frills; available light.



Saturday, October 29, 2011

Boy in the Shower

Leaving the "Painting" series for the moment, and returning to straight photography.


The image below was taken in the spring of 2004, just as I was transitioning into digital, still using the borrowed Olympus point and shoot. Shot in natural light.


It is one of my favorites, when light, composition and model combine to produce a perfect moment; one I shall always treasure.





Friday, October 28, 2011

Photography and Painting

"Daedalus and Icarus", Frederick Leighton.  The theme of Icarus has always been a popular one for depicting graceful male figures in flight or falling in space.  This painting by Leighton portrays the moments before the tragic flight, as Daedalus prepares his son.



The flowing fabrics, the beautiful figure and the sense of impending doom make this an irresistible opportunity for interpretation.  The youth of the model, and the wistful unawareness of his expression, helps to create the illusion, even though the pose is not exact. 



Thursday, October 27, 2011

Photography and Painting

The lush, primitive jungle motifs of 19th century French painter Henri Rousseau provide a perfect setting.



A figure shot in my Houston studio is transformed.


Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Photography and Painting

I apologize for missing Monday's post.  I had computer issues, which have just now been resolved.


One of my most successful transpositions involves the painting, "La Source", by the 19th century French painter Ingres.



The epitome of the coolly classical female figure, Ingres' use of simple lines and subdued color made the painting a natural for its masculine counterpart, but it required just the right model to carry it off. 

In what is an intrinsically feminine posture, it was important that the model be quintessentially male.

Tyler was the answer.

The shot was carefully composed in the studio, with a background of white paper.  Since I had no actual pottery jug, he holds aloft a plastic wastebasket.

Here is the unedited image:



The final image, fully detailed.  Note the model's toes reflected in the water, and the water pouring through his fingers.


This image, printed at 20"x60", was shown at the 2009 Kinsey Institute Juried Exhibition in Bloomington, Indiana.  A copy is part of their permanent collection.

Several people have asked me to "teach" them the technique, but even if I were so inclined, I don't think I could do it.  It has been a long, labor-intensive trial-and-error process, and I learn new tricks and shortcuts with every new one I undertake.

One of my favorite questions came from someone on-line who asked me what "button" on Photoshop did I use to turn my photographs into paintings.

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Photography and Painting

Botticelli's Venus and Mars, or The Triumph of Love over War.  The artist depicts Venus, cool and collected, after a bout of love-making that has left Mars limp and panting, while the Goddess's little minions play in his armor.



The image here was shot specifically for this painting.  The model, Tyler, is nude; the drapery is from the painting.


Tyler is one of those models who has it all - experience, knowledge, education, a painter in his own right.  We did four shoots over a two-day period, and every minute was a joy.  You will see him again.





Saturday, October 22, 2011

Photography and Painting

The 19th century American painter Thomas Eakins had an affinity for the male form, and sometimes took his students out into the countryside to swim and sketch.  The painting below is the result of one such outing:



The painting lends itself well to transpositions.  Eakins painted himself, swimming in the lower right-hand corner.




Friday, October 21, 2011

Photography and Painting

Here is another figure in the Eakins studio space, this one deliberately directed in a 19th century academic pose.  You might recognize this model from a shoot some twenty years earlier. (Sunday, May 15, 2011, Sunday, June 19, Monday, June 20)


He is no easier to shoot now than he was then.