The Inner Path of Photography

We yearn for the taste of the sacred…and through our cameras discover it, the world, and ourselves.

Category: Shows and Competitions

Not the Image I’m usually drawn to…

Yesterday I went to the Monroe Gallery in Santa Fe, New Mexico. They’re showing a collection of work by Carl Mydans, a photojournalist who worked for the Farm Security Administration in the 1930s, and for Life Magazine during World War II and beyond. The images are all striking….(see some of them here on the Monroe Gallery website.)

The image I was most drawn to is not found on the Monroe Gallery website…I wish it were, because it’s powerful and I’d love for you to see it.

It’s a picture from World War II time period. Taken in France, a woman is sitting in a chair  having her hair shaved off by another woman, with other women and a man looking on,  the women laughing meanly. Apparently they suspect the woman in the chair to be a German spy, and this is their way of handling it.

It’s not the kind of picture that I’m usually drawn to…but what caught my attention in this image was the man in the picture and his expression. He is looking over at the photographer, and the expression on his face is…guilty? embarassed? He’s been caught between the enjoyment that can be felt when you’re part of a group, belonging…and knowing that this isn’t really a good thing to do. And you see the connection between him and the photographer as he sees himself in the middle of this.

This is the beauty of Carl Mydan’s work and that of other photographers that I admire. A picture that would be powerful because of its subject matter (although not necessarily unusual, as many events like this have been documented in images), has one more element in it that reflects the complexity of human emotions and actions, the reflection of all of us in life, elevating it to that aspect of fine art that I look for, connect with, and aspire to myself.

In this image, Carl Mydan reminds us that things are not always clean and simple. I see in it a reflection of the challenges we meet often in our lives, of having to makes choices that may be confusing to us and require us to dig deeply to make sure that we’re acting in alignment with our values.

Perhaps the man in the image was only feeling badly for that one instant in time when the picture was shot…and then went right back to the jeering. Even so, Carl Mydan captured an instant of emotional recognition, and it is masterful.

By the way, Carl Mydan died in 2004, and there are only two prints made by him of this image known to exist at this time. All prints in this collection were printed and signed by Mydan. My understanding is that his estate does not appear to be interested in actively continuing to print his work; the negatives are now in selected institutions.

Photo Performance Work tonight – July 1, Houston

I heard Ashley Hunt, the photographer, interviewed on KUHF radio yesterday and I can’t wait to see his show, “Notes on the Emptying of a City.”

Ashley went to New Orleans with a service group from California after Hurricane Katrina; he was on the team to document the aftereffects of the storm. Instead of doing the usual gallery show, he has put together a performance piece that integrates images, interviews, and perspectives about the experience.

In the radio interview, he sounded thoughtful, insightful, and clear about his work and how/why he was doing it…an aware artist with purpose.

See photographer Ashley Hunt’s website for more info about him

And click here for more information about the project and the event tonight.
Tonight, Eldorado Ballroom, 7:00 PM (2310 Elgin  Street)…sponsored by Project Row Houses, Houston.

“A Moment in Time” – My Photo & caption


“My friend Paul usually meditates at 5:30 am every morning. Too early for me! This Sunday however he wandered in to join my meditation at exactly one minute before 9 am. He was my perfect “Moment in Time.”

(Photo copyright Heidi Straube 2010, taken in Taos, New Mexico, 9am MT, 5.2.2010 for NY Times “Moment in Time” event.

“A Moment in Time” – Photographers this Sunday – Enjoy!

Hey, look at this..What fun!

From the New York Times:

“Attention: everyone with a camera, amateur or pro. Please join us on Sunday, May 2, at 15:00 (U.T.C./G.M.T.), as thousands of photographers simultaneously record “A Moment in Time.” The idea is to create an international mosaic, an astonishingly varied gallery of images that are cemented together by the common element of time.”

“You own the copyright. You own the picture.”

Thanks to Lori Allen, at American Writers and Artists (AWAI) Travel Division for letting me know about this event.

Let me know if you participate…I’d love to see your photo! Be sure to check the time for your location (see below).

The magic hour is:

** 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time (New York)
** 10:00 a.m. Central Time (Chicago)
** 9:00 a.m. Mountain Time (Denver)
** 8:00 a.m. Pacific Time (San Francisco)

** 12:00 p.m. Buenos Aires
** 4:00 p.m. London
** 5:00 p.m. Cape Town
** 6:00 p.m. Baghdad
** 7:00 p.m. Moscow
** 8:30 p.m. Mumbai
** 10:00 p.m. Bangkok
** 11:00 p.m. Beijing
** 12:00 a.m. Tokyo
** 1:00 a.m. Monday in Sydney