30 July 2010

Impromptu

Washington Ave, South Beach, March 2010


He walked by me in a rush, talking on his cell phone. He did a double-take just before he crossed the street, looking back over his shoulder, a bit bewildered, to ask me if I was taking pictures of the building wall. I said, "Well, now that you ask, I'm actually taking pictures of people I meet when they walk by."

It had been months since I did a photo shoot for an actor's/model's portfolio. On some of those shoots I would see a random person and think something like, "Now that's a person I would love to put in front of my lens. Authentic. Gritty." Teavin was that sort of person with a cool, urban vibe, and this was my chance to put my theory to the test - that I could snag a "real person" and get them to be my subject and that the result would be very cool.

I felt as if he welcomed the chance to strut his own stuff on the streets of South Beach, where commercial photo shoots occur on any given day. When he agreed to participate, he said, "Okay, I'm gonna go change." He was carrying a plastic grocery-type bag flung over his shoulder, stuffed with a few shirts, a florescent green jacket (with a Haitian emblem on the back), and a baseball cap.

I actually did not want him to change. It would detract from the random person mystique. As he added layers of clothing out there in the hot 79 degree sun, I wasn't worried; I knew he would eventually change back.

I could tell he was loving it, loving the attention from my medium format, machine-of-a-camera focused only on him. However brief our shoot was, it was meant to be - this random encounter. After all, he was traveling with a wardrobe sack flung over his shoulder, just as he happened to walk past a photo shoot, set up, but in need of a subject.

(His name is Teavin, and he is from Haiti, and he now lives in South Beach. He has not been to Haiti to see any of his family in 10 years due to citizenship laws. He was able to call home after the earthquake, and all of his family there is alive and okay.)
 
 




24 July 2010

A Series of Encounters

Wynwood District, May 2010


There is a vacant lot in the Wynwood District of Miami that I frequently drive past on my quests for my next encounter. The half asphalt, half grassy lot covers the full width of the block. Next to it is an old, l-shaped white building in which a Cuban sandwich shop is the only operating business. I was immediately seduced by this crumbling, gritty scene, when one day I saw an old man standing in this lot with a young boy, who I guessed to be his grandson. Even though that happened to be a day that I did not have my camera with me (because I was just leaving work), I nearly slammed on my breaks to soak in the marvelous scene, and I knew I would have to return another day.

…And return I did, in mid-May. I was excited when I saw the old man and the boy standing outside the sandwich shop again, this time with a woman and a girl. So, I practically dove head-first from my Jeep, medium-format camera in hand, so as not to miss this opportunity. Though the little boy was exceedingly adorable, I had my photographic sights set only on the old man.

His name is Pancho, and he is Cuban. He's lived in Miami for 30 years and speaks sparse English - about as much as I know Spanish. The woman who owns the shop is the mother of the two children. I originally assumed that Pancho was the grandfather and the woman his daughter for as familial as they all seemed (but more on that later).

Pancho seemed to be a bit ornery, muttering in Spanish, probably wondering why I was taking his picture and why the woman and her daughter were making him do it. Yet, he did it anyway and allowed me to take as many as I wished. I even dare say he cracked a half smile or two in the midst of it all. To save him the wonder, I counted down: "Dos mas," "uno mas," until I'd used the last of the roll.

As I thanked them all and started to leave, I didn't feel like I'd had my fill of that building and lot. I wasn't done with it…and I'm glad I listened to that little voice in my head that insisted I go back…



Three days later, during another excursionary drive about town, I once again found myself in the neighborhood of that old building, so I thought I'd drive by to see if anyone was there.

It was almost noon, and the sandwich shop was closed. Then, there I saw him, crossing the street, holding a shirt in his hand, apparently about to put it on. Although he was leaving, I just knew he would have to return, so I decided to wait. I made a u-turn to park in front of the building, and in doing so I stopped my Jeep to allow a small dog without a collar to cross the street, heading in the same direction that Pancho had just gone. It wasn't the busiest of main streets, but I still felt a twinge of worry for the little dog, who obviously must have been a stray. Relieved to see him make it safely across, I resumed the duties of my stakeout.

As anticipated, several minutes later I saw Pancho crossing the street again (in the same outfit of three days prior), walking with another man. The two of them paused in the middle of the street to allow the approaching cars to pass, and I saw Pancho turn to see the same collarless little dog in the middle of the street behind them. He bent down and grabbed the dog by the scruff of his neck, causing him to stand on his hind tip-toes. He held him like this until the cars passed, deli bag in one hand, dog in the other. When it was safe, they all crossed the street, landing safely onto the half gravel-strewn, half grassy lot, at which point Pancho began waving his arm demonstratively at the other man (in the same manner of expression as he did the day when the woman jocularly prompted him to pose for the camera) as if to say, "Ackh!" in response to whatever the man had said.

Then, as if cued by a director in a movie, I saw the woman and the two children walking towards the sandwich shop. I waited until she unlocked the back door and went in before I decided it was time to make my move. I announced my presence at the back door, and through limited Spanish and pantomime, I informed the woman that I was back to see if I could take more photos of Pancho.

While this was happening, Pancho and the man were sitting on some stools across the lot, under a lofty tree. The grassy field where they were lounging had accumulated with garbage and debris, most of which was piled off to the side against a chain-link fence. Their grassy domain was decorated with some wooden dining table chairs and bar stools, and a plastic bag full of clothes hanging from a tree branch. Upon seeing me and hearing the woman and girl's beckoning, Pancho placed his deli bag in a cooler (which also contained cans of cold beer), gesticulated and yelled something in Spanish, and then hastened over to us. I then gave him five bucks as a way to thank him for agreeing to participate twice, to which he smiled and gladly accepted. This day he was quite obliging to be photographed and even wanted to introduce me to the dog that I initially took for a stray. He kept saying, "Pooch-o!" calling to the dog, while gesturing to my camera.

I ended up staying there quite a while that day and also photographed the man who'd accompanied Pancho across the street…





I was satisfied that I would leave with some good exposures of Pancho, and it must have been evident that I was wrapping it up, because "the man" approached and spoke only the following sentence in English during our entire encounter: "You only take pictures of him?" He said it jokingly as he gestured to Pancho, arm stretched out, palm up. I knew I had plenty of rolls of film in my car, so I obliged his jovial request thinking, "Why not?!"

His name was Juan, and he was Pancho's friend. He suggested in Spanish that he sit on the benches, and he placed himself in his own poses and seemed quite comfortable doing so. From the moment he walked over to me, he was warm and friendly, and when he posed, he cocked his chin high up in the air as if to say, "What's up?!" to the camera or pending viewer.




Then, I met another man, who probably came out to inspect the source of the unfamiliar voice speaking in halting, toddler level Spanish. This third man spoke English, and as it turned out, it was a ripe day for encounters.

Daniel, 53 years old, is a Native American of the Apache Tribe (direct lineage through his father and grandfather) and has lived in Miami his entire life. He's been drawing since he was 16 years old and has several paintings, which he mounts on copper board.

As it turned out, Daniel was the official owner of the little dog, who I initially assumed to be a stray. Daniel took a couple pictures with his dog, after having chased him around the lot, but when "Pooch-o" (Pucho) decided he'd had enough, Daniel brought out one of his chalk pastel paintings of a woman he was interested in years ago. He told me that he painted her the way he felt about her at the time: he painted her like a goddess of serenity.




While Daniel was inside his house, searching for the painting of his past love, I decided to ask the girl about the three gents' situation. The girl told me that Pancho lived with Daniel in the house adjacent to the lot, which was in need of maintenance and manicure, and Juan lived in his own place.

There was a gap in the chain-link fence that Pucho always escaped through, there was debris in the field, and garbage piled against the fence, yet, the little, feisty dog, Pucho, seemed to enjoy his existence as much as they all did - together in the shade, nestled in their private domain.

16 July 2010

Case in Point

Vizcaya Metrorail Station, January 2010


On the heels of last week's post, let's take my father-in-law, Nick, who visited Miami this past January.


Back home in Colorado, during a typical Sunday afternoon at Nick's house, my husband and his brothers would poke fun at him for various reasons that only an offspring can get away with, such as his style of dress. Yet, his clothes aren't old and ragged; he wears regular "guy" shirts, like from Old Navy. What brings on the good-humored mockery is the ensemble - his eclectic manner of dressing: Birkenstocks with wool socks, whilst wearing shorts revealing his "extra lean" legs…and speaking of socks, paired with every sandal or sneaker are the calf-length variety with the tops cut off, because he complains that the ribbing is too tight on his (extra lean) calves. He also wears perfectly good sweaters with the collar [jaggedly] cut off (and sometimes, cut down the middle to make his own "v" neck), and in the coldest weather, the shining jewel: his authentic moon boots, circa 1970 of which he is quite proud, with jeans, sweatpants, or Old Navy exercise pants stuffed into them. Definitely not a dapper dresser, yet in Boulder, he blends in. Transport him to his visit in Miami, and even I was stunned by how differently I viewed his appearance here. Place a man in one city, and he's perfectly normal; drop him in the middle of a city bedazzled by labels and image, and the residents think he's homeless.

I had a very interesting outing with him to a local, Whole Foods-style grocer's market. A lover of good, crunchy bread, he wandered around the store asking this employee or that where the bread was, and after being sent to the bread loaf isle, he asked another employee, describing exactly what he was looking for. The second employee sent him to another part of the market, and I could sense the uneasiness of the employees and shoppers by this ex-hippie (or is it hippie for life?) searching desperately for ciabatta bread, like a man who hadn't eaten a full meal for days. (In the end, he settled for buying the ingredients to make his own bread at our house - molto deliziosa!)

At a glance he was, perhaps, donned in the same fashion as one might see from a Miami man "without abode," but the good people of the market did not take a closer look to see that he was freshly showered and that his clothes were completely stainless. The looks of perplexity were quite obvious - and now even, rather absurd. Before that day, my husband and I told him that the people of Miami might mistake him for a homeless person. Perhaps after that outing, he began to understand what we'd been telling him, and I think at some point he probably just wanted to escape from this Oz and go back to his real world of Boulder, Colorado.

 
Here is the piece I wrote on him, shortly after that visit. I originally planned to use his story and likeness for my thesis project, but it has since taken on a different form, and so he no longer fits. So I share it here, instead:
 
Meet Nick. (Nicola as he now prefers it.)
 
I didn't have to interview him. I already knew him. He asked me what he should wear, what he should say, what he should do. I told him, "Just be you."
 
A retired architectural engineer. A tailor. A hippie. In Boulder he blends in. In Miami they think he's homeless.
 
He avoided the draft to 'Nam. They told him he was too thin.
 
He can punch a line from a song into any conversation. It's usually a blues song. The oldies. The goodies. Real Blues.
 
His laugh is infectious - unique. His pauses make you wonder: has he finished? Nope. Just thinking.
 
He is from Campobasso, Italy. He lived there until he was three. Moved to Canada and loved it there. Then moved to Detroit, and hated it there. "What was 7 mile in Detroit like?" "I wanted to go back to Canada. I cried to my mother everyday. Finally one day she said, 'We ain't goin' back.' And that was that." And she said it in Italian. She didn't speak English.

I asked him to tell me some stories. The real stories, ones I'd heard many times.

I asked him to talk about his friendship with Kanjuro Shibata, Sensei. The official bow maker to the Emperor of Japan. Nick had been a guest in Sensei's home. Nick had Sensei as a guest in his home. Sensei's yumi and ya are hanging in my home. A wedding gift.

"Tell me about the time you were sent to deliver a message to the Dalai Lama."

My father-in-law met the Dalai Lama.

08 July 2010

Introduction

What is Scratch the Surface? When I first began this project, I wanted to express that judging others based on nothing more than a glance is absurd, pointless, and unfair. Stereotypes are nothing more than excuses to be socially lazy, yet I am not convinced that anyone - including myself - is guiltless of it. Scratch reminds me daily to pause a little longer, look a little deeper, and assume nothing. If the eyes are the windows to the soul, then what is a refusal to make eye contact based on - fear? uncertainty? innocent nonchalance? or pure disregard for a fellow human?

How accurate can a dismissal based on circumstance actually be? The clothing shell does not define one’s thoughts, beliefs, hopes, or dreams, and I have learned in my life that anyone has the potential to surprise, regardless of how they are dressed, where they live, or what their situation in life is.

The purpose of this project is not to change anyone’s engrained habits, but I at least want to share that it is okay to voyage beyond those social dividers. The other side can be quite enriching. In my encounters, not only do I continue to be surprised by the people I meet, but I continue to enjoy my conversations with them as well.


Up next: Meet Nick. Stay Tuned...