Categories
fine art nudes

More with Tara…

Here are some more images @tara and I made walking around finding magic here and there…

Her posing with the tree was just incredible and I can’t choose “the one.”

© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Tara

 

Categories
fine art nudes story telling travel

Anne Duffy Overlooking the Edge

Anne Duffy Overlooking the Edge ©2016
Anne Duffy Overlooking the Edge ©2016

I’d love to take credit for it, but Anne Duffy is the one who spotted the tree first. A beautiful tree. And like so many trees on the island of Kauai, the erosion from years of the ocean doing what oceans do, left a stunning series of twisted roots in a way that made any onlooker feel they had x-ray vision and could see through the ground. Quite a place to make a photograph of the equally stunning Anne.

Anne and I spent several hours there one morning, and I made so many photographs of her, climbing, posing, arching, contorting, along those roots. It sparked a very interesting conversation.

Anne asked the question, why did I make so many photographs, while other photographers such as Zoe Wiseman, made far fewer exposures of her when they would shoot. Zoe is a brilliant photographer and the reason we were all here in this Hawaiian island paradise to begin with, as part of her nearly annual Zoefest.

I thought about Anne’s question for a moment. Many reasons came to mind. First, the ocean is loud. Communication can be a little difficult trying to shout over the sound of waves. I’m fairly sure my only direction to Anne that morning was the occasional, “Beautiful!”, or, “Yes, that’s perfect! Hold there!”

But as I thought more about it, even without the ocean roar, I do tend to make a lot of photographs during a shoot. So the environment being too loud to direct Anne, wasn’t quite the correct answer, I concluded.

I thought a little more and said, “I don’t know. Maybe Zoe is simply a better photographer than I am.” A little self-deprecating certainly, but I’ve always admired photographers who shoot a very limited number of frames during a shoot. I’ve never been that kind of photographer, even back in the days of shooting film. Even then, I shot many many rolls of film during a shoot.

Anne graciously countered, “I don’t think she’s a better photographer than you because she shoots fewer frames. You just have different styles of shooting.”

Which was true. But I still wanted to come up with a better answer to her question. It was one I had thought about for decades, actually. Why so many images?

I even sat down with Zoe a day later to talk more about it. Zoe likes to work the model’s pose for a while until it’s just what she has in mind before clicking her camera shutter. And Zoe has something else that I don’t have, which is that Zoe used to model herself. So she has a perspective on posing that I’ll very likely never have.

Myself, when I’m photographing a model of the caliber that Anne is, I first like to leave a little room for discovery. Because I trust her to be thinking as much about what the photograph is going to look like as much as I am. And she knows what she’s doing. All of the models at Zoefest do. They know light. They know angles. They know composition. They are equal collaborators during any shoot, and I’ve come to believe that if I’ve chosen to work with them, I’d be silly to over-direct them. Let them do their thing.

Which explains why my direction during a shoot is fairly basic. Give them a place  to start, tell them what my angle of view is, so they can picture where they are in the frame or how much of them I’m photographing, and just begin exploring what happens. I do like to tell them what I’m seeing or if I really like something that’s happening so they are getting feedback throughout the shoot. They always appreciate that and it helps to build the connection and collaborative nature of the shoot. I may have them adjust an arm or a leg if I see a line that needs just a little tweaking, but like I said, when working with models like Anne, she doesn’t need much direction from me to make a beautiful image.

But that’s still not really an answer to Anne’s original question. It wasn’t until I returned to California, that I had an epiphany and finally the answer to my question.

Why do I shoot so many images during a shoot?

For example, on the shoot with Anne pictured above, I made over 1,500 photographs of her up in, below and around that tree. I’m just looking for maybe five or ten really. The few that really stand out. And if any of them look too much like another I’ve picked as a final, then I usually send them into a sort of photographic cage match. Two photos enter. One photo leaves. Gotta pick one of the two.

But the reason, I’ve come to conclude, of why I make so many photographs in a shoot, is because not only am I a photographer and director, but I’m also a film editor. I’ve spent over 25 years in dark little editing suites, pouring over raw footage from too many directors to remember. Looking for moments. The one take that really hits home. The performance that works best in serving the story. The best of the best. Making order from chaos.

A large part of my editing skill set happens after the shooting is done. After the production is completed. And then away from the mayhem and distractions that are part of any healthy shoot, I can take the time in a more chill environment to really look at what we have. Hopefully the director, if it’s not me, has given me lots of coverage. Lots of options to choose from. And then I can look at what we really have. I can forget how difficult it was to get a certain shot. Put away that the client really didn’t like the female actor. All of that on-set noise. Just look at what we have captured with fresh eyes.

Editor eyes.

What’s on the screen. Is it working. If not, why not. Let’s find something else.

And in combining these roles that I might have in any given project, I’ve learned to take the advantages of them all and sort of cross-pollinate them into my own Billy method of workflow.

And that means taking advantage of whatever role I happen to have. If I’m shooting or directing, it’s making sure I have lots of choices for the editor, whether it’s me or someone else. I’m not a spray-and-pray photographer, but there are times when nature is being random with wind-blown hair, waves and what not. And then yes, I’ll shoot rapid fire, hoping to catch the right combination of everything being in place. But mostly the reason that I shoot as many images as I do is because the editor in me craves coverage. Give me as much to work with as possible.

And when everything aligns in the most wonderful, inspiring, breathtaking way, such as with Anne, overlooking the edge of the world here, it’s a truly wonderful moment to realize.

Categories
fine art nudes story telling travel

Jessamyne Morning Shoreline Surprise

Jessamyne Morning Shoreline ©2016
Jessamyne Morning Shoreline ©2016

Sometimes you get surprises. Jessamyne and I were up early, shooting along one of the shorelines on the north end of Kauai. I had picked the location because of the beautiful exposed tree roots due to sand erosion over the years. Quite striking. And we did two setups along the shore there. Both beautiful.

We paused for a moment and were in the middle of deciding what to do next. Head to another location or try something else with those trees. The morning sun was coming in low, almost behind us now from around a bend in the beach. It wasn’t direct light, but it was casting some interesting beams on the sand near a large piece of lava rock on the shoreline.

Jessa and I thought it might be interesting to try something there. I told her to get near one of the beams that was now quickly moving away from us. My original idea was to put her in one of them, but we were a few minutes too late for that. But still. There was something good about this light. Very soft.

And as soon as Jessa got down on the rock and I got down to sand level with my camera, I could see her lovely skin reflecting a very compelling glow. Admittedly, while photographing her, I didn’t know if these photographs would end up being great images, or just good images. Jessa was posing brilliantly, but I wasn’t sure if the light was enough to make her stand out from the background or not.

However, later when she and I reviewed all of the setups from this day of shooting, we both gravitated to this one. And we were both surprised because this had definitely been one of those, well we have great stuff here already, let’s just try this one more thing since we’re here, kinds of setups. It was an extra. A bonus.

Yet, sometimes you get surprises.

Categories
fine art nudes

Editing shoot 2

Working on my second shoot of the fest that I had with @tara who I first worked with in 2006. I love to work with models more than one time. Once you figure out how each other works on the first shoot it’s over, the good stuff comes on shoot 2 and 3 and on and on. Here are a couple I just finished working on… more to come. We had a good shoot. For the first few days of the festival this location provided much tranquility and privacy and people who didn’t mind. If it had only lasted… but that is another story…

 

It was the perfect place to swim in calm water. A part of me is still there I think.

 

© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Tara
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Tara

 

While we were in the water shooting the Frigate Birds kept diving and flying by giving us a great show. I wonder if they wondered about us. 😉

 

© 2016 Zoe Wiseman
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman

 

Categories
fine art nudes

Jess and Vassanta

This was really a tree built for two.

 

Categories
fine art nudes

Tree Cuddles

model: @jessamyne

© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Jessamyne
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Jessamyne

 

© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Jessamyne
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Jessamyne

 

 

 

 

Categories
Uncategorized

Rainy Group Shoot

Our last day there was a spectacular storm but we carried on with the group image of all the models who attended the retreat. Thank you ladies… and gent.

© 2016 Zoe Wiseman
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman
Categories
fine art nudes story telling

Beauty has no age limit

@billysheahan and I were talking and he made the observation that not one model at our retreat was under the age of 30. I’ve never really thought about that before other than to make sure everyone I work with is over 18 because age was never an important factor in my work. Though after it sinking in that every single woman there was over 30 years old it really made me happy. When I tell someone I’m 45 years old they always say, you don’t look 45. Well what is a 45 year old supposed to look like? What is a 30 year old supposed to look like and what is someone 18-25 supposed to look like? Are we supposed to stop being youthful? Does not looking your age give you more power or does it take it away? It’s something interesting to think about. Sometimes I wonder if I looked my age if people would take me more seriously or offer more respect by not treating me like a kid. Is looking timeless a blessing or a curse? And is it really all about looks or is it life experience shining through that exentuates a timelessness? And it isn’t specifically directed towards the female models amongst us since our one lonely male model is also over 30 and doesn’t look it. I’m sure the ravages of time will come for us all, eventually, though will that make any of us less beautiful or less youthful? The only thing we can really do is love ourselves and be patient with ourselves and try not to allow outside influences dictate when we are too old to be beautiful.

Enjoy an image @vassanta and I created

© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Vassanta
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Vassanta
Categories
fine art nudes

The trees!

Anne in the burnt treeThis tree is massive!Fitting intree huggerjust fitsgettin low...

Categories
fine art nudes story telling

Fairy Jess

© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Jessamyn
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Jessamyn
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Jessamyn
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Jessamyn
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Jessamyn
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Jessamyn
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Jessamyn
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Jessamyn
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Jessamyn
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Jessamyn
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman - model: Jessamyn
© 2016 Zoe Wiseman – model: Jessamyn

I’ve always wanted to shoot in a location like this. Normally locations like this are full of snakes and alligators, and that is what is so beautiful about Hawaii. No kill you things. Thanks @jessamyne for getting muddy feet. 🙂