Tag Archives: photography

Staffing Up

Most moving assignment EVER

I don’t think he could stop, even if he wanted to.  Mark Meyers is a wicked fast marathoner  I shot for Runner’s World on a cold December day in Wisconsin.  My spectacular assistant David Ettinger served as placeholder as Meyers booked around the track:

Still, keeping him in the frame proved challenging.

Tenacity yielded results, but didn’t slow Meyers.  He kept running.

I am grateful that he paused here to correct the Earth’s rotation:

Meyers’ recent marathon times are in the 2:40′s.  As a fellow runner I’m in awe at this level of ability:  by the time I’m finishing  up he’s already home and half-way through Chariots of Fire.

The Truck within a Truck Arrived at 9:15 am.

After it was lowered to the street I waited patiently for another, smaller truck to come out of that one.  Full of rodeo clowns.  It didn’t, or at least it didn’t during the time I was driving and photographing it for the GMC owner’s magazine this last fall.    Never could explain the occasional snickers and requests for chili from somewhere near the luggage compartment, though -

Like shepherding an out-of-town friend, I took the shiny black Terrain to see nice views (from Northerly Island)

And over a few of the Chicago River’s bridges:

We went for a Rattlesnake Sausage with Citrus Mojo Mayonnaise, Espresso Bellavitano Cheese and Crispy Fried Onions at Hot Doug’s Encased Meat Emporium :

(don’t forget the duck-fat fries)

We watched a gangster movie.

and then headed off to Willis (formerly Sears) Tower for a look from the observation deck on the 110th floor.  Since the Terrain wouldn’t fit in the freight,  I waved at it from the nifty glass ledge they’ve just installed up there (photo of me in handstand courtesy David Ettinger).  Doing the handstand made me feel like Superman.  Well, Superman plummeting towards Earth:

At the end of the day I took the Terrain back to its hotel, exhausted.

Am I the only one who hears that buzzing sound?

Early Fall I spent a day at Long Lane Honey Bee Farms for Country Woman magazine.  Should you be in search of an exceptional Queen bee,  this would be your source.  For $35, they’ll ship (ground only) right to your door.

No photographers were harmed in the making of these photographs.  Bees, either.

#15 was especially active.

Lunch did include honey.

Tray Sheikh: Grant Achatz at Next

I spent a day at the restaurant Next photographing food, Michelin three-star chef Grant Achatz (pronounced ACKets) and the general kitchen commotion for Cooking Light’s 2011 Chef Awards issue.  Above is a placeholder, my loupe standing in for a truffled egg custard with salted cod roe.  We swapped plates to present a serving for one:

The menu that opened the restaurant was titled Paris, 1906 – Escoffier at the Ritz, and drew from Auguste Escoffier’s recipes.

Supremes de Poussin and poached cucumbers, filled with chicken mousse, wrapped in salt pork.  Beautiful, delicate.  Love the plates.  Yum, probably.   I regret the food wasn’t cooked to eat, but rather to be seen, so not entirely edible. Rotated 90 degrees clockwise they’d resemble a famous Japanese cartoon character, I think.

Chef Achatz in the kitchen and front-of-house -

I’d watched him eviscerate sea urchins in the kitchen at Trio in Evanston, Illinois some nine years earlier – taking a portrait then for Elle magazine.  One dish I’d shot then included a heated rock, topped by a dry oak leaf, then covered by a glass.  Accompanying a perfectly prepared red meat – I can’t remember which – to the table,  the glass was lifted and the smoke from the oak leaf wafted.  Cool.  Scans from film:

Work in Next the kitchen was performed with relaxed precision and extraordinary focus.  It was a real treat to watch.

Chicago in the Beer and Now

Is there a draft in here?

I spent some time photographing beer and its Chicago co-conspirators for Imbibe magazine, working at four notable spots: Revolution Brewing (the cover), Hopleaf, The Map Room and Owen and Engine.

Drywall stilts come in handy -

Revolution Brewing is located about eight doors south of my studio.  How convenient.

Josh Deth, proprietor

Cask conditioning in the basement. And Little 500 bike parking.

in case you want to show loyalty to the Revolution -

The Hopleaf is an institution in the Andersonville neighborhood of Chicago. Owner Michael Roper is remarkably passionate and knowledgable about All Things Beer and Chicago politics.  I’m just guessing here, but I imagine the two go hand in hand.

Michael Roper, owner, Michael & Louise's Hopleaf Bar

 

The poured beer in each picture is Allagash, from Maine's Allagash Brewing Company, Portland. Roper's choice.We eventually found the Map Room in Bucktown. Check out the taps that run along the driver's side of the bar: none of them have the big ad levers. This way they can gang up more taps than usual and the bartender can work across the bar without getting lost in a forest of levers. Cool, eh?She too is drinking an Allagash.

A Reissdorf Kolsch, somewhere in the South Pacific.

Owen & Engine is more a restaurant than bar or pub, although it specializes in beers, and the pairing of those beers with their menu.  They have a certified cicerone on staff to hep you with that.

Cicerone Elliott Beier with his Two Brothers Hop Juice double IPA

Yes, Beier.

 

 

 

 

"Hoss" Rye Marzen, Great Divide Brewing Company

Thanks to Elliott I am a reformed hop-head.  I now favor bitter.  Good stuff, that.

 

Adrenaline, Hubris and Twinkie the Kid

He never blinks.  Note that no one in the image addresses him directly.  Either they are terrified or awestruck.  Or possibly, they distain the hearts on his bandana.  The mammoth Twinkie is oblivious. He stands vigil in a Davenport Iowa convention center as  15,000 runners pick up their bib numbers and souvenir t-shirts, and check out the competition for the Bix 7 race the next morning.  I am one of this throng.

Named for the local and accomplished jazz coronetist Bix Biederbecke, the race has little to do with jazz, unless you count footfalls:  it’s a 7 mile course on a bank of the Mississippi that features epic hills and purse money high enough to attract nine Kenyans this year.  Or, maybe it isn’t the purse, but the 30-foot stretch of tables just past the finish line.  They’re full of Twinkies.

The Kenyans finished in 32 – 36 minutes.  I finished in 53.  I figure they just wanted the Twinkies more than I did.

Sister Sarah goes Rollerblading

In full habit, 80-something degrees in Central Illinois. Why not? A bundle of positive energy, Sister Sarah Roy rolled around the academic quad at the University of Illinois smiling and engaging practically everyone in conversation. The assignment was for Ladies’ Home Journal – a story about women who wore clothing that indicated their religious affiliation.  A favorite few:


Little Egypt, Deep Water

Located at the very southern tip of Illinois, Cairo (they pronounce it CAY-roh here) is at the confluence of the Ohio and the Mississippi rivers in an area we call Little Egypt. Though the place is no stranger to flooding, it’s been an epic year. A dismal, worst-in-recorded-history kind of year. Right now the rivers are up at about 60.75 feet, and though there are walls built to hold it back, it’s clear that creative solutions might be necessary to keep the water out. This week, the Army Corps of Engineers decided, in an effort to keep Cairo above water, to blow holes in some of the nearby levees in order to redirect flood water to farmland. Understandably, farmers are not happy with this.

I’ve been to Cairo. Sadly, it’s been downhill ride there ever since shipping by river lost out to rail a long, long time ago. The streets were practically vacant when I arrived to complete a Chicago magazine assignment to photograph the Illinois stretch of the Mississippi river. I suppose it didn’t help much that it was raining, but I guess I did get a chance to photograph Cairo in its natural habitat.

When threatened by flood they fit this and other openings with gates.

Fort Defiance park is the southernmost point in Illinois -

Daryl Shemwell still runs a Barbeque place there, but I believe all the residents have been evacuated and his street’s been closed. Sinkholes.

I think my dad had his baby shoes bronzed

I suppose this would be on a more federal level. Bronze Statue #4: on a recent trip to Washington DC, I found this guy inside his namesake giant obelisk.

American Bronzing claims to have bronzed over 14 million baby shoes since 1934. Although they also feature an image of a bronzed pacifier mounted on a walnut plaque, it doesn’t appear they go much further than tot stuff. The Bronzery, however, gives rates for adult ice skates ($338.95 and up for the pair). And boxing gloves ($606.95 and up per pair). Bowling pin? No prob. $235.95. A baseball’s $89.95, but a football must be problematic: “call for quote.” Rubber chicken. Bagel. Athletic supporter. Wow. I must confess it has me looking around my studio at things my own alchemy couldn’t transform.