And they say it’s the fairest of all…

bicycle at dumbo

bicycle at dumbo


I’ve just added some pictures to my photography site, under the Minolta X700 section. Highlights include black and white pictures from Jersey City and the Renegade Craft Fair at McCarren Park Pool, as well as color pictures from a bike ride to DUMBO.

And while we’re on the topic of photography, of late I’ve been curious about a couple of Japanese photographers whose work I saw at the Met last weekend.

Polar Bear (1976) - Sugimoto Hiroshi

Polar Bear (1976) - Sugimoto Hiroshi


When Sugimoto Hiroshi first arrived in New York City in 1974, he visited the American Museum of Natural History where he discovered “the stuffed animals positioned before painted backdrops looked utterly fake, yet by taking a quick peek with one eye closed, all perspective vanished, and suddenly they looked very real. [He'd] found a way to see the world as a camera does. However fake the subject, once photographed, it’s as good as real.”
Containers At A Chinese Port (Honjo Naoki)

Containers At A Chinese Port (Honjo Naoki)


Honjo Naoki, Sugimoto’s younger colleague, explores the same theme of reality/illusion in his work by using a tilt-shift technique to achieve a shallow depth of field with selected areas of focus, making his real-life gargantuan subject(s) look like little toys in a miniature world.

Certainly not news (Honjo and other photographers have been doing this for a while) but definitely captivating and appeals to my love for architectural types and miniature things. These pictures also inspire me to bake a huge cupcake and photograph it to make it look like a miniature dollop of deliciousness and frosting.


And next time I see you I’ll be pleased to see you
I hope you’ll be pleased to see me
I’ll visit your picture I won’t have the nerve
To tell them that they’ve got you all wrong

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