Friday, October 17, 2008
NOLA & NYC, here I come!
I am off to New Orleans, LA (on business) and New York, NY (on pleasure) for the next 2 weeks. I plan to take a lot of photos (as long as my piece of garbage masquerading as a camera cooperates) and will post a few here and there as I find the time. In the mean time...
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
William Claxton (1927-2008)
One of my heroes died over the weekend. If you are reading this weblog, chances are you have seen the work of photographer William Claxton. If not, go here right now and take a look as his online portfolio. I think it's what was once termed "the stuff of legends." To fill in some of the details, the LA Times obit is here.
I met him a couple of times. The first time was 1995 or 1996. I had recently moved into the Hollywood Tower in Hollywood during an eight month attempt to (among other things) live in LA. I had an office job across town on the Westside and was living a pretty dead-end lifestyle...tired, broke, and busted - commuting every day on LA public transit (a whole 'nother topic). Anyway, one afternoon I was strolling up the avenue on my lunch break when I saw a rather tall gentleman who looked like an older version of the William Claxton I knew from old photographs. Needless to say it was the man himself, accompanied by his wife Peggy Moffitt. I introduced myself, made nervous self-conscious small-talk, and was about to be on my way when Claxton (I never knew him well enough to call him by his nick-name Clax) invited me to an exhibition opening he was having at gallery on La Brea a few days later. Honestly, it was the first exhibition I had been to. It was great to see so many of his photos up close and in such high quality. Of course the empty pockets prevented me from taking home any souvenirs - something I have faint pangs of regret about to this day.
I met him years later - 2005 or so - here in San Francisco. He was at the Booksmith promoting Taschen's DELUXE edition of his epic Jazz Life (incidentally this is now available as a special edition). I re-introduced myself and we had a nice but brief conversation. I think only my wife knows this - but I had a fantasy that I would do a photo session with him some day joining the ranks of Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Ray Charles, and Steve McQueen in some small little way...but this was not to be. Hearing of his death saddens me and thinking about it leaves me with little else to say but...
Farewell William Claxton. May you rest in peace.
Thursday, October 2, 2008
Arts & Architecture (1938-1967)
My buddy Dan (or Grumpy Dan as the wife affectionately calls him) just hipped me to QUITE an online resource for all of us fans of Arts & Architecture magazine. For a good solid chunk of the 20th Century, this journal was a West Coast clearinghouse for all things modern spotlighting nearly all of the greats and just as many who now languish in obscurity. Thanks to Taschen (who really do want you to buy their product - and you should, if you can afford it), there is a wealth of info on this site including excerpted issues in PDF format and art/poster-sized reproductions of some of the amazing covers. It really is worth a few hours of your time. Here is a sample of one of the covers, this one designed by Ray Eames in 1943 or thereabouts.
Labels:
architecture,
eames,
graphic design,
west coast
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